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Samples
The Fantastic Sounds of Jay Dee AKA J Dilla [WAV] screenshot
Audioz | Nov 15 2018 | 9.4 MB
Equipped with just an MPC and a box of vinyl, Jay Dee (aka J Dilla) inspired generation after generation of beatmakers to chop up drums, dig crates for samples, and create entire works in the comfort of their bedrooms all the way to the studio. Alongside his group Slum Village, Jay Dee honed his craft and found his voice within the underground hip hop community in Detroit.

Deeply embedded in the roots of jazz, soul, R&B, Jay Dee looked to the past for inspiration and thus created a path for the future. His pluralistic, genre-bending style not only pushed music forward, it inspired his peers and the generations to come to define their own sound. Pay homage to his years of crate digging and dig through this collection of his original sounds.



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comments

  Resident 8.03.2010 67
+8
Word! Thanks
  Member 21.05.2018 8 260
+227
Thank you!!!!
  Resident 1.01.2009 2 537
+314
i wonder if any of the money from this goes to his family....

lets hope so...
BOOM BAP HIP HOP ALL F*CKING DAY!
  Member 18.03.2017 1 25
+14
His mother is a part of this project, so I think it does. :)
  Resident 1.01.2009 2 537
+314
Yeah, this is official....dammm straight from Dilla's lab.

seriously dope share...

(i Just copped this from drumbrokers site...support the legacy yo)
BOOM BAP HIP HOP ALL F*CKING DAY!
  Resident 25.12.2017 6 1896
+704
I was planning on grabbing this next month, so this is a nice surprise. (I'm still planning on buying it, if the money actually goes to his family, unlike all the other packs/companies trying to make a buck off of slapping Dilla's name on a Lo-Fi kit.)
Big thanks for the early drop, Horsemen.
"Rap is a gimmick, but I'm for the Hip Hop, The Culture." ~ Method Man ~
  Resident 1.01.2009 2 537
+314
I had to pay $59.99 for this and it comes on a USB stick but i wont get it for another few weeks when it actually gets dispatched...

Ill be honest...after downloading this pack im really disappointed. Not a lot of samples...literally 3 FX samples...a few poor bass tones and a selection of drum hits that could have come from ANY bootleg pack released over the last few years.

Considering they had access to his studio/master tapes/floppies etc im surprised by the poor content...

I felt the same with 9ths kit from Drumbrokers...just seemed like a quick cash grab.
BOOM BAP HIP HOP ALL F*CKING DAY!
  Member 18.03.2017 1 25
+14
I wish I didn't agree with this, but yeah... There are some good drum sounds, but it's no better than most drum kits. I would say the 9th kit was worse though.
  Resident 25.12.2017 6 1896
+704
Yeah, it was pretty lite, considering how much they had at their disposal, but I have to assume that they will be releasing more packs from his stash.
It has some really nice, solid tones, drum and bass-wise (in my less-than-humble opinion,) but some of the bass tone labels are off by a half-step and I was surprised that there weren't more effects....not a huge deal, but still.
These do sound pretty generic at first listen, but, honestly, when you actually set them into a track over other drums that "sound the same," they really do sound a lot better--depending on what you're making, of course.
As for the 9th Wonder pack, I was more than slightly disappointed with that pack as well. That could have been any generic pack. It's a shame to, because he has some nice samples, like off of "Tutankhamen."
I want to know when Apollo Brown or Black Milk are going to drop some signature packs. Jake One commented that he kyped some of Black Milk's drums before, and that he should release a pack, so....maybe?
"Rap is a gimmick, but I'm for the Hip Hop, The Culture." ~ Method Man ~
  Member 18.03.2017 1 25
+14
I think it proves that just getting the drums from a legend won't automatically make you better. It will still depend on sound selection etc. And on Splice you can hear how other producers used these drums to create loops, and some of them sound incredible.
  Resident 25.12.2017 6 1896
+704
I fully agree. Two good examples of making seemingly brash or overly raw drum sounds work, are Khrysis and Apollo Brown who have some tracks with some evil-ass, klang-bash-bang drums that would sound rotten if they weren't chosen for a specific track.
I have an ammunition dump of drums, but it's because drums not only have to fit the track, they have to play well with one another. The drums were the first instrument I learned to play and over the years I've heard real drummers (or "drum-set drummers," if you will,) who have the same problem a lot of beatmakers have, which is getting their drums to sound like they belong together. Because of this, over the years, I've actually become a little *too OCD on my drum tones because I admittedly don't *always get it right the first time.
Classic/Boom Bap beats aside, I checked out the "Vanity: Sound Like Mura Masa" pack a while back (I don't foresee ever using the drums in the pack, but they're not bad drum sounds for what they are,) and his drums sound tight because they fit....well, whatever you want to call the musical sub-genre that he makes. I think some people are just unable to hear drums as they would any other musical instrument.
"Rap is a gimmick, but I'm for the Hip Hop, The Culture." ~ Method Man ~

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