Samples From Mars DMX From Mars MULTIFORMAT

By | September 16, 2021

Samples From Mars DMX From Mars MULTIFORMAT

Samples From Mars DMX From Mars MULTIFORMAT

Classic 80s Drums From the Digital / Analog Hybrid
The DMX is an 8 bit eprom-based drum machine developed in 1981, featuring acoustic drum samples and a warm, analog filter. The DMX is just about the closest you can get to the sound of a Linn LM1 without spending a mortgage on a drum machine. The drums are punchy and funky, instantly recognizable, and fully tune-able via internal trimmers:

The Sound
At the core of the DMX are 11, 8 bit PCM acoustic drum samples that have been companded (compressed and expanded) to increase their dynamic range, making the sound quality approximately 12 bit in the analog domain. All samples pass through the famous Curtis 3320 analog filter chip, and are output through crunchy, old skool converters.

From this you might assume the DMX sounds Lo Fi – but you’d be wrong! Instead, the sound is sophisticated and classic – like a pseudo – acoustic drum set frozen in time. And despite being digital, the filters give it an unmistakeable organic warmth, making the sounds come alive, and sit easily in a mix.

Like the DX, the DMX has a warm bass drum, crunchy snares, boxy boogie toms, classic hi hats and shaker. But it also features a range of sounds the DX does not – a more LM1 type clap, that amazing 90s house rimshot and tambourine, a ride cymbal, and a second group of toms.

Capturing the Samples
In an effort to retain the exact character and punch of the original machine, the recording process was kept simple. We tracked every hit through an API 512 preamp, to tape, and through an Apogee Symphony MKII. Each drum voice was tuned by hand (tilting back the hood of the drum machine and accessing the little thumb wheel) 24 times.

Once the clean samples were captured we did a round of processing to provide some color and RMS (loudness) to the kit. Using our trusty Overstayer Saturator in parallel, we added more harmonics and dirt to the attack; by EQing a little bass out before the saturation, and back in afterwards (via API EQs) we were able to really drive the midrange on things like the Toms. Through parallel hard clipping (Overstayer M-A-S), we increased the fatness of the Bass Drum; tightened the claps with an SPL Transient Designer, and used a tube EQ to darken drum various drum hits.

After sampling was complete, all of the hits were then chopped and painstakingly arranged into individual hits and 16x hit kits.

Sampling the DMX Through the S612
The DMX samples are solid and straightforward – so in an effort to make things weird we ran it through our favorite sounding sampler of all time – the Akai S612. The 612 was Akai’s first sampler, and is an amazing sounding 12 bit sampler with a user-definable sample rate (via midi note), a clippable input, start / stop sliders, and a sweet analog filter (just like the DMX) to top it all off, so it seemed like the perfect companion.

While the DMX sampling session was calculated, the 612 session was a lengthy, freeform jam. We played DMX drum hits into the 612, changing pitches on the DMX, recording in at different levels (from clean to smashed), changing sample rates on the 612, and applying various filter and decay settings, all the while sampling every useable pitch for each drum voice.

We modulated the ride cymbal with a pitch LFO, adjusted the start point on Toms to turn them into massive sub hits, reversed hi hats, and even created looping rimshots and shakers, whose delays get faster the higher up in pitch they go. Even the inherent hiss of the 612 played a major role in the sampling process – by leaving snare tails long at the end, the hiss acts as a kind of “air” that gives the samples depth, and reverb. The results: a strange, distant cousin of the DMX:

In the End
The DMX drums are iconic, and instantly recognizable, so naturally they fit into more retro productions. The filters really allow the samples to come alive, and while it’s not as large sounding as a Lindrum, it sounds tighter and punchier, and is no wonder it’s been a mainstay in such a diverse assortment of genres (from disco and boogie to 80s rock, dub, hip hop, drum n’ bass and even dancehall).

But the DMX sounds can also be re-contextualized in a more modern track and really shine – in fact, it can work quite well as a psuedo-acoustic drumset. Add a live hi hat and you really start to blur the lines between drum machine and drummer (Think: Tame Impala Currents).

And if you’re after more unique, less recognizable sounds, the lo fi beauty of the DMX S612 is for you. With filtered, clipped, and looped 612 processing, this classic drum machine shines in an entirely new way.

The Samples:

  • 2200 24bit WAV DMX Samples
  • 13 pre-made 16x hit kits for instant jamming
  • Clean, Color, and S612 – sampled versions of all drum voices
  • 24 pitches per DMX drum hit
  • DMX features: warm bass drums, crunchy snares, classic toms, hats, rides, crashes, rim, claps, shaker and tambourine
  • DMX 612 features: filtered bass drums, Sub kicks, clipped snares, looped rimshots, reversed hi hats, LFO rides, airy hi hats and more

Formatting:

  • Ableton includes (1) master drum rack containing all samples, (13) pre-made kits racks, and 6 groove clips
  • Kontakt, Logic, Reason, SFZ, FL Studio include: (100) individual hit and kit instruments
  • Maschine & Battery include: 13 pre-made kits
  • MPC1000 & MPC2500 include: 13 pre-made kits on 4 MPC Programs
  • FL Studio contains: 13 FPC Kits
  • 6x Midi DMX grooves to replicate the quantization and shuffle of the DMX
  • 180 MB Unzipped

Ready For:

  • Any 24 bit WAV Compatible DAW or Sampler
  • Ableton Live 9.7+ (Not Intro)
  • Kontakt 5.6.5+ (Not Kontakt Player)
  • Logic 9+
  • Maschine 2.6+
  • Reason 8+
  • FL Studio 12+
  • Battery 4.1.5+
  • MPC1000 or MPC2500

Links

Demo Preview:

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