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retrobyte
a.k.a. Christopher Norman

Registered: Apr 2005
Location: Michigan, USA
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Oct-20-2005 23:45
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xmotleyx
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Apr 2001
Location: Seoul, South Korea
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So So very true!!! However, if one takes a trance track an reworks it properly (ala icey) you do get a "true" breaks track (hehehehe).
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Oct-21-2005 13:20
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DJ Shibby
Amphoteric Superbase

Registered: Jul 2004
Location: Of Earthzen and the Therethen
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Nice post, mate.
My disclaimer: not intended to offend anyone!!
K, my two cents...
Trance has become so "same" and formulaic because no one appreciates the strange differences that mistakes make anymore. This is how the genre has evolved to where it is now, and it seems like we're stagnating its growth at every turn by talking about how everything *must* be done a certain way for it to be "correct".
Structure, kick style, lead sounds, basslines, etc.
The new "trend" happens to be having short breaks in there (why? because we're copying other big producers and not being original, since when we're original it must be a mistake, but if a big producer is original first, then it's okay for us to emulate it).
Do whatever crazy shit you want to do in your tracks. Maybe you'll accidentally come up with the next fresh sound. Even if you made the best break in the world, it still wouldn't compare to something original.
Food for thought.
Cheers again for the good post.
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Oct-21-2005 20:59
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Derivative
Bipolar Bear
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Dublin
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a shuffled kick and a clap every 2nd and 4th beat in trance IS a breakbeat. its just a really uninspired crap one.
that said, there are exceptions to the rule:
hybrid. nuff said.
the genre breakbeat (and drum and bass whilst we are on the subject) is just a really nice style to look into, to see just how good a well built breakbeat can be if you spend the time to really flesh it out with acoustic drum loops/single shots/composites to create a sense of swing and movement.
the principle is still the same though - its a 'break' in 4 x 1/4 length beats per bar. to further your arguement - when does a breakbeat become a breakbeat? when you loop an amen in the background? or must you get a session drummer to play an original break for you?
you can still call looping an amen break and stuttering it in your sampler, a 'breakbeat.' even though you will probably get a haranguing for doing it on any music production forum. and it takes no longer than building a typical trance kick shuffle. it may be pretty crass. it may be the easiest thing in the world to do. but lost tribe and higher sense used to do it and make complete classics out of them.
so yea. they are breaks. just shit ones. which isnt a very good selling point if you market a bunch of trance tunes as breaks to the breakbeat loving fraternity and all you get is: bom. TCHIK!. bom,, bom TCHIK! for 30 seconds part way through the track.
thats not to say that complexity makes a good break. hybrid produces breaks which some here might lumber in the same category as cheap trancey 909 breaks but hybrid gets away with it because it fits the material he writes.
Last edited by Derivative on Oct-21-2005 at 21:33
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Oct-21-2005 21:21
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DigiNut
You kids get off my lawn!

Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Toronto, Self-proclaimed Centre of the Universe
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Hybrid is two people and used to be three... and they may have a handful of tracks out which use "simple" breaks, but they have amazing technique that IMO is second only to BT. They do tons of stutters, granular edits, sweeps, shuffles, etc. and you can hear them in lots of Hybrid's tracks, like Force of Gravity or their remix of Cafe del Mar. Somehow I get the feeling you haven't listened to a lot of their stuff...
Anyway, it's academic to think about "when does a breakbeat become a breakbeat". But here's how I think about it:
It has to resemble a real drummer.
It doesn't have to *be* a real drummer, nor does every drum hit have to be expertly edited with tiny timing inaccuracies in order to sound exactly like a real drummer. But it can't sound computerized. Perhaps there is some gray area between what sounds organic/natural and what sounds like a computer, but it's still quite possible (and not too difficult either) to classify certain grooves as VERY mechanical and monotonous.
So that rules out the cheap shuffled-kick breaks, and the Amen break that's looped for 4 minutes (because the same loop repeated dozens of times does not sound genuine at all).
You may agree or disagree with that definition, but in all honesty, it doesn't really matter. "Breakbeats" created simply by shuffling the kick as stated above will NEVER be accepted in any serious breaks circles.
___________________
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Oct-21-2005 22:13
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Jinyun
Junior tranceaddict
Registered: Sep 2005
Location: England
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"But it can't sound computerized."
But it CAN, thats the thing, its electronic music. It all depends on what kind of feel you want to create.
There isnt ONE rule for all.
___________________
There are two kinds of light, the glow that illuminates, and the glare that obscures.
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Oct-21-2005 22:22
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Derivative
Bipolar Bear
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Dublin
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well i havent listened to everything hybrid has put out. not by a long shot. but symphony isnt all that complex breakswise. and the hybrid remix of xpander really does just have a 909 kick and snare for a good part of the track.
this is one of those things called 'elitism' which ive encountered from industrial to emo and back again.
music is necessarily fluid. just because a breaks track sounds 'computerized' and is generally minimal in the sense of kick shuffling doesnt mean it shouldnt be taken seriously by fans of breakbeat music. there have been (ironically) great breaks tracks with not so hot breaks (think cold fresh air by higher sense - stuttered amen! ooooh! and thats a moving shadow classic). if the 'breaks community' dismisses songs based on the fact that they sound 'computerized' and 'dont cut it' owing to some arbitrary standard they set on what exactly they have to do with their drums - then they can go f.u.c.k themselves.
just like those whiny emo jerks that tell every guitar band that comes out of detroit what they are and why they arent emo.
all of this is just shop talk though. a breakbeat is just a beat that breaks from 4/4 time. simple as that. beyond that you can be as lazy or as obsessive as you want about what it sounds like/how complex its going to be/whether or not its going to be a composite of synth drum hits and live drums etc etc.
if you are going to talk about lazy, slapped together in fl studio in 2 seconds breaks then go look at the thousands of tramen rollers in drum and bass. i honestly cannot see how anyone could possibly think these are better crafted than some of the simplest of programmed from scratch breaks. all they did was sample dom & roland.
if its lazy it'll show. but there are some situations where a simple shuffly break is really all thats necessary - i cant see sunrise at palamos launching into a bloody tramen or anything. the breaky bit before it breaks down is spot on the way it is. and yea, its a breakbeat, albeit a fairly simple one.
Last edited by Derivative on Oct-22-2005 at 00:17
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Oct-22-2005 00:01
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