![]() ![]() Nowadays anything that is not "Trap" is considered "Boom-Bap" by the younger generation, a kid might call a 2010 Scott Storch beat "Boom Bap", as a 36yr that's hilarious to me but I have to sort of accept things change. I would be willing to pay big money for something like that, and I'm sure I would DEFINITELY not be the only one.Ĭlick to expand.I'd say most of the time Lo-Fi is Boom-Bap too, but there's a big percentage of that sub-genre that also uses a lot of modern-sounding stuff borrowed from Trap and then it becomes sort of blur.This new terminology is funny to me. I want authentic 12 bit sound, but with all of the advances of today's technology, like a faster processor, computer integration, storage capabilities, true variable sample rates, a big screen with waveform editing, auto slicing, groove extraction, "real time" time stretching, on board virtual effects, etc. I want a hardware device that has all of that built in it. That combination made a LOT of the songs that I loved the most in Hip Hop. I also would want to see them include the Akai S950 filter, DAC and ADC converters. I would personally love to see a standalone sampling drum machine that has 128 note polyphony with the SP 1200's pitch algorithm, filter, DAC and ADC converters. ![]() Lo Fi seems to really be popular right now, even though I'll never see it as anything other then Boom Bap. ![]() There are smaller companies like Isla Instruments with their upcoming SP 2400 and individuals like Low Hiss who's attempting to build his own SP 1200 clone, but not ONE of the big name companies have even considered it, and I think they are missing out on a great revenue opportunity. In an age where big companies like Korg and Behringer are going out of their way to recreate vintage keyboards like the ARP Odyssey, and ARP 2600, I'm really surprised that not ONE of those companies has considered making an authentic 12 bit sampler. As far as I'm concerned, the ONLY advantage that hardware samplers and sampling drum machines have is the grimy sound of the dirty 12 bit and early 16 bit samplers with their DAC and ADC converters. Click to expand.There's absolutely no doubt that the computer is king right now. ![]()
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