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136 results found for "Digitakt"

  • Atmospheric Minimal House Jam with Elektron Digitakt only

    My newest creation was ment to get my very first "real" Minimal House Track. But what else would one expect from 59 Perlen rather than something deep atmospheric? I'm a big reverb guy. So well here we go. I recently watched some tutorials about Minimal House and got completely fascinated by its basic principles. I started collecting samples for a while and this is the first track I made last night. Perfect Saturday night moods! I very often make use of the Bit Reduction combined with massive Reverbs, modulated with the LFO to create evolving textures. This track uses this technique on the pad sound in the background, which also adds some "Lo-Fi" Crackling to the entire atmosphere. It creates huge „Waves“ that keep the track flowing and moving.

  • My ordeal towards the Elektron Digitakt and why I want you to avoid it

    How all began - before the Digitakt dropped in I started making music many, many years ago, but it really Ableton Push or Digitakt? Then came Ableton with the Push 2. I was told to get a Digitakt but I didn't listen I'm writing all this down for you because throughout I finally came to the Digitakt And so I finally arrived at the Digitakt. I will also compare the Digitakt with other current Grooveboxes.

  • SA Apr 30, 7pm: Electrohood - Elektronik aus dem Quartier [plus Set-Preview]

    It will be a pure Digitakt performance and the embedded brand-new track below is taken from it. Wunderkammer-glattpark.ch Preview of my set Learn how to make your own house tracks with the Elektron Digitakt Have a look on my Digitakt Online Class! It's a video course focussed on creating tracks with the Digitakt. It covers LFOs, Arrangement, Performing, Digitakt FX and many other interesting topics, plus it's upgraded

  • Introducing "Dust" , a free Samplepack

    Learn how to make your own house music with the Digitakt! The samples can be used with all samplers like Digitakt or within every popular DAW. Have a look on my Digitakt Online Class! It's a video course focussed on creating tracks with the Digitakt. It covers LFOs, Arrangement, Performing, Digitakt FX and many other interesting topics!

  • Dawless Minimal Synthjam with Digitakt, Digitone and Big Sky Reverb

    Some days ago, I posted a video about my creation process of making textures and drone sounds on the Digitakt

  • The Digitakt Challenge: a Minimal House track with only one sample [Free Download]

    I made a Digitakt track entirely with one single sample! Some said it sounds like "being at a horror dentist" 🤣😂 Download the Digitakt Dawless track for free

  • How I manage my sample library (not only for Digitakt)

    like to show you how I manage my sound library and especially how I manage it in conjunction with the Digitakt My Digitakt Sample Workflow My workflow with Digitakt was very rudimentary until now when it came to hard drive manually, copied the samples I favored to a new folder and transferred the folder to the Digitakt Since I program my grooves directly on the Digitakt, this part is rather uninteresting for me. When I'm done, I can then export the kit directly into a folder that I can import on the Digitakt.

  • How to create perfect loops from any field recording (+ Video Preview)

    tutorial on how you can easily create loops from ANY sound material you can think of and make your Digitakt tracks more personal (and not only Digitakt). The video is an exclusive add-on to students of my Digitakt Online Class, a video course that is constantly

  • 59 Perlen releases electronic EP "Made Of Dust"

    Made Of Dust The lead track "Made Of Dust" was recorded entirely on an Elektron setup, consisting of Digitakt

  • New Jam: "Reject My Mind" - Ambient House on Digitakt only

    The texture sound of the intro is created using the Digitakts trigg repeat feature at a speed of 1/64

  • Make a track Pt. 1 - Get Inspiration

    This blog series takes care of a problem faced by many musicians: the jump from developing a single loop to a complete track. I compiled some best practices from my own workflow that you can use for your own process. In the first part, I'll cover a number of tips to help you gather inspiration before moving on to idea generation, arrangements and the subsequent mixing and mastering. These topics will be covered in future parts of the series and they build up the production process I usually go through. Create a template for your setup To start with, lets talk about templates. I know, this is not a super exciting area, but on the long run, you will be thankful for it because you can rapidly start music making whenever you want. Whether you work purely DAW-based or use a hardware setup, it's essential to be prepared when inspiration lurks around the corner. And templates can be a huge time saver too. When I talk about templates, i mean an empty song or project file that's pre-configured with all the settings you typically need in your productions. For example, an Ableton template could hold your favourite send effects ready to go, a mastering chain, a track with a sampler holding your most frequently used kick samples, tracks for your favourite synths, and so on. A template for a hardware rig, such as mine, could have pre-defined MIDI channels of your gear, effects could be configured and much more. The aim of a template is that you can start producing without having to make the same settings over and over again. Plus a template is also ideal for keeping a specific style consistent within a set of tracks. Search for Samples Samples are the backbone of most music productions. At the same time, a lot of inspiration can be drawn from them. Therefore, I recommend paying special attention to their selection and investing some research and time. Especially if you are planning to produce several connected tracks in the form of an EP or an album, it offers the advantage that the individual songs form a unit by using audio snippets that belong together. You should get into the habit of pre-"mixing" and paying attention to the quality already during the selection process. That means, that you should keep the Audiospectrum on your mind and choose samples wisely to fill the spectrum in the most balanced way. Gather Sounds and Ideas and create your "Moodboard" Sources of sounds are many, and one preparatory work to find inspiration is to collect and compile samples with a specific goal on your mind. This can be thematic, for example, or genre-specific sample packs, holiday field recordings, sampled synth loops or files from free sound archives. A great way of collecting sounds is a field recorder that can help you snapshot your environment. Read this article for more information about field recording. Field recordings are a fantastic way to make your music unique and develop a signature. I also believe that this brings in a lot of feeling to your work as well. Another great source of ideas is to browse your existing samples. Pretty often, I find stuff that I've almost forgotten! I'm using a software called XO for this task. It automatically sorts audio material, categorizes them, suggests similar samples and makes it easy to create kits that I then can export as single WAV files. It's also greatly integrated with DAWs. I could dive into my library for hours! When listening and selecting some of the gathered sounds - your "Moodboard" - you often get ideas and at the same time they give your music that unique flavor. Process your Samples Another interesting approach to gather inspiration is to "process" existing material in some way. For example, you could time-stretch your recordings. "PaulStretch" is an algorythm that's included in Audacity, a free audio editor for Windows, Linux and Mac. It allows lossless stretching of samples up to a factor of 1000, ideal for creating drones and textures that you can use with each DAW or hardware sampler. Another idea to breathe life back into existing material are the numerous plug-ins of modern DAWs. For example I've had great results with Ableton's "Harmonizer", which pitches the original audio material with several layers in chords. It's definitely worth playing around with the Plugins your DAW offers. Make a shopping list This is a tool I use pretty often for planning a release! Most of the time I have an idea in my head of how i want a new song should be. That could be a reference track I like, for instance. I listen to that track a couple of times and write down some notes - Speed of the track, length, elements, effects and so on. I also draw a sctructure (build up, break, drop, main part, outro). In other words, I describe the track with a couple of adjectives. Then, I make a to-do list out of my notes and start researching. Each time I found one of the items on this list during my inspiration phase, I check it as done. This really feels like "Shopping" my sample library :D This way, you can turn the track creation around and start working from a different perspective (which can be pretty refreshing). How do you get inspired? Let us know in the comments below. In the next post, we will start putting your inspiration into concrete ideas!

  • First track of upcoming event DUST, a collab with Atlas Castle

    Learn how to make your own house music with Elektron Digitakt! Have a look on my Digitakt Online Class! It's a video course focussed on creating tracks with the Digitakt. It covers LFOs, Arrangement, Performing, Digitakt FX and many other interesting topics!

About

59 Perlen is a music artist based in Zurich, Switzerland. Producing electronic music is his passion since 20 years. He's producing ambient and dance music, scores for contemporary art installations and he teaches music.

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