Future Music

Danny talks us through his process from inspiratio­n to mixdown

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BEGINNINGS

“I often start with little samples or ideas. This latest track [Selecta] started off with a little horn sample from my trusty 1994 Future Music sample CD. It was actually a friend of mine that brought me this sample, but I’d remembered it from the sample CD years before. The question then was how to take that sample and make something of it.

“Some producers will start off with the drums then add a bassline, then the intro becomes incidental sounds. I can’t work like that. I always have to have a sample or something to grab on to. I find it much easier to write a bassline when I know how the track is going into it. A lot of my tracks just start as a breakdown, which was exactly the case with [Selecta].

“It’s important that you get your drums in quite quickly once you have a sample going. I’d usually start with some very basic drums that I know will work with the sample. You’re trying to work the drums around the sample, essentiall­y, rather than just creating some drums from scratch.”

TAKING IT FURTHER

“One thing I find really useful and I’ll do in a lot of my tracks is to have a little stab [at the start of each bar]. I find it much more useful than just going into the drums. That stab will inspire me to write the bass.

“Although I love to play the keyboard, I find with basslines it’s so fiddly I prefer to do it onscreen. I’ll start by putting the tonic note from the sample as my first note. Then maybe I’ll try it an octave up or something. I’ll add a few notes

“COPY AND PASTE WHAT YOU HAVE AND DO AN EDIT ON THE NEXT BIT”

and that quickly gets me vibing, but without that stab there or the music around it I don’t think I’d be able to write the same kind of bassline. So it really helps.

“I’ll take that one loop and then repeat it and do an edit on the next bar – maybe invert the bassline or something to make a nice variation. Then it’s a case of duplicatin­g and making these edits. Maybe I’ll put a pitch bend on the fourth bar, for example. Quickly you’ll end up with a nice little bassline.

“That’s my trick

– if you’re stuck on a track, copy and paste what you have and do an edit on the next bit. It seems really clichéd, but it’s amazing how your brain reacts when you’re listening to, say, 50 seconds of music rather than a two bar loop. If you think about it, music isn’t always about the impact or the drop, it’s about how it progresses, and you don’t get a chance to do that unless you start arranging it.”

ARRANGEMEN­T

“My main section of a drum & bass tune, the main drop, is normally about 48 bars. That’s 16 bars as the main section, another 16 with maybe a vocal coming in or something else changing, and then another section of just letting it roll out for a bit.

“You might wonder to yourself, maybe it would be good to just keep on going up and up and building more stuff on there? There’s a reason to let your tracks roll out though. For one thing you can go into a breakdown and then go back into the drop, for more dynamics. The other thing is, from a DJ mixing point of view, that’s the point where you’ll be bringing the next track in, so you want it to be a little bit stripped out. It helps make it a bit more DJ friendly.

“Some producers complain about having to create radio edits or short edits for streaming, but I always do an extended mix as well. I actually like doing the shorter edits, it’s a nice snappy version and I think it certainly doesn’t hurt to have both.”

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