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To recapture their essence, you have to think about them in terms of their simplicity. It’s
no exaggeration to state that many of the most familiar drums are downright minimal,
technically speaking. To get started, it helps to understand that many of the early
analogue drum sounds consist of two elements: a sine or triangle wave and a noise
generator with filtering. Of course, envelopes are involved, but with the exception of
simulated maracas and cabasas, these are strictly ramp shapes with instant attack and
simple decay/release segments.
Some of the early Roland tones, notably cymbals and the iconic 808 cowbell, rely on more
complex oscillator configurations that are unique to their custom circuits. Additionally,
the distinctive 909 toms use a dual-oscillator approach. But by and large, the most
common drum sounds can be re-created with a single oscillator, noise generator and
filter, with a few basic envelopes for sculpting the behaviour of each.
You’ll want to keep your oscillators in the 30-70Hz range or all kick drums, keeping in
mind that 40-50 Hz is the sweet spot. It’s worth noting that frequencies below 40 Hz may
not be reproduced by many speakers, which is why the magic notes for club-friendly bass
are E0 (41.2 Hz) to A0 (55 Hz).
Kick drums
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808 Kick. It’s fascinating that the most
popular kick drum for modern dance music
(the Roland TR-808 kick) has, arguably, the
simplest architecture of any synth sound; a
sine wave with no filtering, with a ramp Fig. 2 (Image credit: Future)
(decay/release only) amplifier envelope and
a pitch envelope set to an extremely fast decay (see Figure 2). Setting your pitch decay to
between 20 and 70 milliseconds will impart that trademark 808 “click” transient
(depending on the depth of the pitch modulation), while longer amplifier decay/releases
(both should be the same) will give you that “Jeep drone” originally popularized in hip
hop.
Best drum machines 2020: our pick of the best grooveboxes for beginners
and pros
If you want to use your custom 808 kick for bass lines, switch your synth to monophonic
mode so the releases don’t overlap and create unpleasant low-frequency intermodulation
artefacts. For a more synthwave, retro sound, back off on the pitch envelope and shorten
the amplifier decay. The result will be a shorter, more traditional new-wave kick.
Pro tip: If your synth only offers a triangle wave, you can approximate a sine by using
very low filter-cutoff frequencies that eliminate all but the lowest harmonics. In this case,
route the rapid pitch envelope to the filter cutoff as well, to retain the attack transient.
909 Kick. You can simulate the 909 using this same architecture, but switching to a
triangle wave followed by a lowpass filter with a very low cutoff frequency. From there,
add a bit of cutoff modulation from the pitch envelope (on some hardware synths, these
are one and the same).
Next, increase the decay of the pitch/filter envelope to the 200-500 ms range. By
lengthening this decay, then adjusting the depth of the modulation for each destination,
you can increase the punchiness of the kick into 909 territory. I’ve heard several
producers refer to this as “chest punch,” which is fairly apt.
Pro tip: By experimenting with cutoff modulation depth, in conjunction with slightly
raising the cutoff frequency itself, you can simulate the hard-style distortion effect, since
triangle waves contain odd-numbered harmonics, the same harmonics that are
emphasised by adding a distortion pedal.
Snare drums
Classic analogue snares generally consist of a sine/triangle tone generator and a noise
generator, each with their own dedicated amp envelopes (see Figure 3). Fans of the 808
and 909 (and TR-8 and -8S) snares are already familiar with the “snappy” knob, which is
essentially a volume knob for the noise aspect. Reduce that to zero and you’re left with the
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tonal element of the drum.
As for the noise, filtering and amplifier decay are the two defining parameters. Unless
your synth allows the pitched oscillator to be routed directly to the output—or through its
own filter—you’ll need to stick with a lowpass filter to fine-tune the noise character. Some
synths, like Reason’s Subtractor offer detailed control over noise decay, volume, and
colour (tone), which is perfect for this application. Other synths, such as Sylenth, offer
parallel signal paths with independent filters for sculpting the noise without affecting the
sine/triangle oscillator.
808 Snare. Start with a sine wave, tune it to 160 Hz (or play E2), and give its amplifier
envelope an instant attack and decay/release time between 250 and 350 milliseconds. If
there’s a lowpass filter in its path, open the cutoff to maximum.
For the noise component, give it a separate amplifier envelope and re-create the “snappy”
parameter using its volume. The snare decay parameter can be simulated by varying the
decay/release value between 100 and 600 milliseconds.
If both sources also share a single amp envelope at the end of their synthesis signal path,
be aware that it will affect the overall decay, in addition to any enveloping on the oscillator
and noise.
909 Snare. Structurally, the 909 snare is nearly identical to the 808, so you can use the
above instructions as a starting point. While the pitched waveform of the 909 is more
complex than a simple sine or triangle (and too short to be determined using an
oscilloscope), a triangle wave serves well. The amplifier envelope of the pitched element
has a slightly longer decay, but not significantly so.
As for the pitch envelope, part of the 909’s punch comes from a slightly longer decay.
Instead of the 808 click, experiment with decay ranges in the 100-200 millisecond range.
Additionally, lowering the lowpass cutoff to 90% and applying an identical envelope to
modulate the cutoff will enhance the impact of the sound. From there, you can adjust the
noise decay independently to taste.
Pro tip: To make the 909 snare emulation even more convincing, apply generous
amounts of compression. This was a key production technique in classic house and
techno.
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Toms
Those other drums in the kit, the toms are no less important than the kick and snare in
adding the right vibe to your music.
808 Toms. Under the microscope, the 808 toms are largely based on the same
architecture as its kick: A sine wave with an extremely short pitch envelope for a
transient, and an amp envelope with a short-to-medium decay/release—but played in
higher octave ranges. However, if you listen closely, you can hear a touch of lowpass
filtered noise with a very low cutoff frequency subtly blended in the background. Because
of this, the architecture for the snare drum will work well for reproducing them, by
following the above instructions.
909 Toms. 909 toms are a different beast altogether, consisting of two oscillators tuned
a fifth apart (7 semitones), with the fifth being slightly lower in volume. Here, a triangle
wave will serve as a convincing substitute for the original oscillator circuit. As with its kick
and snare, the 909 toms’ pitch envelope has a slightly longer decay than the 808 (100-
200 ms). This adds punchiness and should also modulate the filter cutoff frequency for
added authenticity. The base value for the cutoff should be about 40% to 60% of
maximum. From there, customization is a matter of what’s available on your chosen synth
and personal taste.
Simmons Toms. Simmons electronic drum kits dominated the ’80s. While the
Simmons kick and snare were just as common, it’s the SDS-V tom that is the most
recognizable today, as it’s also a close cousin of the disco tom.
Pro tip: To create that classic disco-tom sound (pew! pew!), skip the noise generator,
open the filter cutoff to maximum, and use a sine wave instead of a triangle.
Percussion
Wood and metal provide the defining acoustical properties of real-word percussion such
as cymbals, hi-hats, cowbells, and claves.
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And although hand claps, bongos and congas are made of different materials, they share
design elements with metal and wooden percussion, but with a few additional tweaks.
Hi-Hats and Cymbals. While the TR-909’s cymbals were all sample-based, the 808’s
cymbal, hihats, and cowbell are all based on a bank of six pulse oscillators that are
processed using a HD14584 hex Schmitt trigger inverter chip. This is amazingly
specialized and nearly impossible to reproduce without physically re-creating—or digitally
modeling—the circuit design. So, we’ll stick with the synthesis model we have used so far
to build the types of cymbals and hats found in ’60s- and ’70s-era home organs and the
Roland CR-78 drum machine.
For a closed hat, duplicate the sound (by saving and reloading, or copy/pasting) then give
the new sound a tight decay of 200 ms or less.
To get the closed hat to cut off the open hat, as on all drum machines, you’ll need to create
a “choke” or “exclusive” group and assign both hats to the same group. Ableton’s Drum
Rack allows this from within its input/output section (see Figure 6). This assigns both
drums to a monophonic channel so that when one plays the other is cut off.
Pro tip: To get closer to the vintage Roland CR-78 character, add a touch of resonance to
your highpass filter to create more of a “ping.” For cymbals, use the above open-hat
design principles, but with a very long decay and release time.
E6 is a good MIDI note to begin with, and the frequency range of 1.5 to 3.5 kHz offers a
wide array of valid options.
Pro tip: While it’s tempting to add a touch of pitch envelope to enhance the transient, at
these high frequencies, the result will be more of a squeak or chirping sound.
Cowbell. The essence of the original 808 Cowbell consisted of four simultaneous pulse
waves at the following frequencies: 555 Hz, 835 Hz, 1.37 kHz, 1.94 kHz. You can easily
swap them out for sawtooth waves, if your synth doesn’t provide pulse-width control.
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Since there’s no filtering—and 555 and 835 Hz are the dominant frequencies—you can
approximate this timbre on nearly any two-oscillator synth by dialing in those tunings. (A
tuner and MIDI key-to-frequency chart will help if you’re synth is limited to semitones
and cents.) From there, set your amp envelope decay to around 600 milliseconds. Even on
an affordable synth like the Korg Minilogue, the results are compelling if you have the
patience to tune it properly.
Pro tip: You can often use these same settings to create congas and bongos, simply by
playing the sound a few octaves lower. For agogo bells, try a higher octave.
To simplify this technique for nearly any synth, just use white noise, followed by a static
(unmodulated) bandpass filter with a cutoff frequency between 800 Hz and 1.5 kHz. To
add more of a cupped-hand sound to the clap, increase the resonance. The amp-envelope
decay works best between 450 and 800 milliseconds.
Pro tip: For finger snaps, increase the bandpass cutoff to around 2.5 kHz and add reverb.
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