I
find breakbeats to a great tool when I'm writing music. I usually have
a few ideas for chords written down in my notebook that I've come up
with either at my M-Audio Piano or on my old acoustic guitar. Then I
pick a break to start a vibe going. The thing I absolutley love about
REX 2 files is that I can import the file into my sequencer (I use
Cubase) and simply type in the tempo I want and cubase is able
to
put it perfectly in time all in the blink of an eye.
REX2
format files provide hit points for the break so your kicks, hats and
snares are all divided up for you and you can mute or delete parts of
the break you don't want, this is cool if you're looking to have a more
sparse beat going on, you want to do some editing or if you
want get the individual sounds out of the break at
start from scratch with a
new beat.
Filters and Long Reverbs
Another
thing I love about using breakbeats is filtering the sounds, so I can
take the break and have different versions of it throughout a song. For
example, If I want to breakdown to a light passage of the song I can
use a bandpass EQ (you will find presets for this in Cubase and other
popular sequencers) that will still give me a nice vibe and rythm but I
benefting from the change in dynamic, both when I drop down and when
the main break comes back in.
I also like to filter the breakbeat down (take
alot of the high frequencies out) and put it through a longish reverb.
A reverb such as this will push the beat back in the mix as will the
lack of top end, then when the main beat comes back the long reverb
goes and all the high end come back, and blam, the tracks kicking off
again.
This again goes back to dynamics, what is known as 'tension and
release' and you see it in movies as well as music. It's great to have
phat beat going, but if you don't have a break from the beat, or you
don't get a release from it, or benefit from the effect you get of it
coming back in. So you create a hole or a space, leave it open from a
passage. say 4 or 8 bars or whatever feels right to you and then
bang...you drop the beat back in.