In The Lab With Vohn Beatz
January 11, 2010
Inside the studio with 12 yr old producer VohnBeatz as he takes you thru making a beat. edited by: S1 SKP 2010
Mike Swoop In the Lab
January 1, 2010
Mike Swoop’s debut album, “New Love” drops February 2nd. Featuring appearances by Big Quarters (Lake City Browns), Toki Wright (Rhymesayers), and Diametrix. The record will be available IN STORES & ONLINE.
He’ll also be hosting Last of the Record Buyers Jan 21 2010 - Minneapolis, MN.
VIDEO: Just Blaze Reminisces About Baseline Studios
December 27, 2009
For the premiere episode of LTD Presents Conversations, the homey Hawaii Mike sat down with Just Blaze to discuss the history and closing of the legendary Baseline Recording studios. (spotted@nahright)
LTD Presents Conversations: Just Blaze (Episode #1) from LTD Magazine on Vimeo.
Ask the Pro With Ariel Borujow
December 16, 2009
Even the best producers need help and with the constant changes and updates to music production software and hardware the most dedicated novice can become frustrated. In Nodfactor.com’s continued dedication to developing and showcasing the best production talent we have resurrected ASK THE PRO Question and Answer series previously published in Scratch magazine. One of the original contributing engineers, Ariel Borujow, will be answering your technical questions with speed and accuracy. So send them over to [email protected] with the subject “Ask The Pro” and keep checking back to Nodfactor.com for Ariel’s answers.
Today we begin with some mixing basics:
Q:What’s the best way to start a mix? Placement? Levels? Compression?
A: My rule that I always go by is to know and understand the direction and feel of the song before you start the mix, then figure out how to try and capture that. The way I go about it is by requesting from the client a rough mix of the song. By doing this, I can get a feel of the levels of the tracks and where things are placed in the song. Second I usually pull the faders up and set “levels” and just listen a few more times by solo’ing tracks and getting to know the playing field a bit. From there I mute everything and start with the drums. Ideally my goal here is to make sure that the bass and kick are knocking then slowly bring in all the other percussion elements. I might pop the vocal up here and there as I bring in the remaining percussion tracks and instruments. Once I have all the tracks minus the vocals I go directly for the hook. The reason for this approach is usually the hook has the most elements. Of course, most songs are about the hook so you want to make this very impactful. At the end of the day there are no rules on how to start a mix. Every engineer works differently, and this is a little insight to my approach. So with that said, good luck on your next mix!
Q:What’s a basic order to insert effects? (i.e reverb first?)
A: I’m not sure if I am clear on the question but I will answer it the best I can. There are really no rules in the order you insert effects or dynamics. For one, effects (reverbs,delays,etc) generally don’t get used as inserts. On occasion now, especially with DAW’s (digital audio workstations) where you can automate them it’s more common to find them on inserts. You can just automate the master bypass if need be. I sometimes do this with last minute delay throws on a mix. The “norm” for effects is to put them on an aux track and choose a bus to feed the input. At that point, on the specific channel you would want that effect on, you would choose the bus that is feeding the effect and set the level you desire. As far as inserting dynamics (gates, compressors) and eq’s there really is no right and wrong way, it all depends on the sounds you are going for. If you compress first, putting an eq second can maybe bring out some of the frequencies that the compressor may have taken out. Hope I was able shed some light.
VIDEO: 9th Wonder Rocking The MPC 2500, Teaching Class On Sampling
December 9, 2009
Spotted@Onsmash
9th Wonder shows off some of his MPC2500 work and cooks up a beat for his friend blogger Maestro.
Maestro Knows - Episode 1 (9th Wonder) from Maestro Knows on Vimeo.
VIDEO: In The Lab With Engineer Ariel Borujow
November 24, 2009
Had a really great convo with platinum engineer Ariel Borujow. He walks us through his rooms’ set-up, what he’s working on and explains why the fine art of mixing and mastering is in jeopardy.
VIDEO: Triggering Breaks In Ableton
November 17, 2009
Came across this great site, Winksound.com, that has tons of beat-making tutorials. Check out this clip on how to trigger breaks in Ableton.
In The Lab With K-Salaam & Beatnick
November 3, 2009
In part 1 of my interview with K-Salaam & Beatnick I got them to speak on why Pro Tools is better than an MPC and their process for making a remix. Download their new mixtape, Never Can Say Goodbye, HERE.
VIDEO: RZA In Studio With The Black Keys
October 16, 2009

Our friend Ski Beats put us on to his work with the The Black Keys a few months ago and I just found this clip of RZA jamming with them on Hip-Hop Is Read. The hype is real. Watching RZA play guitar warms my heart. Make your own samples, dammit.
Tonedeff Wants To Change Hip-Hop’s DNA
September 30, 2009
In November Melodyne will finally be releasing Direct Note Access (DNA) which is in Beta now. The plug-in promises to revolutionize music manipulation and QN5′s Tonedeff breaks down why sampling will never be the same.
Basically… in terms of hip hop… imagine sampling something and completely changing the actual melody and keeping the feel of the recording… keep the sampled flav and not get sued. You can take a piano riff and replay the recording like it was MIDI or a string/guitar sample and flip keep the realistic feel without having to resort to cheesy synths. Basically this plugin lets you literally play with pre-recorded audio like it was midi. You could never do that before.
If I had a sample with some shit on it…and I didn’t like one note…I’d have to select that whole portion and pitch shift it to fix it… now, I can just reach into that specific instrument and fix that one note without affecting anything else in the sound or changing the timing of it, make it louder/softer, etc. The applications are pretty much fucking endless… it changes everything. We’ll be allowed to sample again cause I can take “Apache” and flip it so that it’s no longer “Apache” anymore…but keep the instruments. Apache will now be a patch.


