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Yo. Do any of you know how to get that tight sound like Destiny's Child or Justin Timberlake? I'm working on some rap tracks that I want to sound tight and clean. Also something like Xtina's "Dirrty" or Toni Braxton's "Wasn't Man Enough For Me".

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anonymous Sat, 08/07/2004 - 15:35

Your question is kinda vague, with too many possible answers. Are you talking about vocals, drums, overall track? Is there a particular issue that you are having? I could help you but you kinda threw me off when you said, "tight pop sound on rap songs". If I knew what you are referring to I could help. My only advice would be check out those producers' HipHop tracks(Timbaland, Neptunes, etc.) And see if that is the sound you are looking for. Sorry :(

Ammitsboel Sat, 08/07/2004 - 16:45

The mastering also has a lot to say on those tunes you refere to.

Tight rap sound on "Destinys Child" and "Justin Timberlake"?
Those albums sound very different from each other...?!

When you say tight rap sound i think of Dr. Dre's productions together with Bernie Grundman.
Dr. Dre get's his sound from an AKAI sampler, SSL mixer and a sony G8000 mic... + other stuff.
All of this is used carefully and not "over tweaked".

Best Regards,

UncleBob58 Sun, 08/08/2004 - 22:10

If it's REALLY rap, it should be DRY, DRY, DRY!!!

Those tight snare drums are low pitched snare samples pitched way up on a sampler like the Akai SP1200 or the MPC3000. "Old Skool" stuff was pretty dense due to stacking multiple loops on top of each other, these days they seem to be very sparse.

I don't listen to the artists you mentioned, but I hope this has been of some help.

anonymous Mon, 08/09/2004 - 21:01

"Your question is kinda vague, with too many possible answers. Are you talking about vocals, drums, overall track? Is there a particular issue that you are having? I could help you but you kinda threw me off when you said, "tight pop sound on rap songs". If I knew what you are referring to I could help."

Sorry, I'll try to be more specific. I'm talking about the overall tracks. When I listen to pop radio, the drums sound super gated and when I listen to rap radio, things (at least on the low end) seem to be bigger and take up more space (could this be a track count thing because pop uses so many more tracks?) The issue I'm having is my stuff sounds more like Nelly and Lil' John. I've got deep low end, but I want it to sound tight and punchy. I noticed the linear notes on the Dirrty track and Toni Braxton track I mentioned list Dave Pensado and Dexter Simmons. Does anyone know any of their tricks? Both seem to mix a lot of pop AND rap tracks.

"Tight rap sound on "Destinys Child" and "Justin Timberlake"?
Those albums sound very different from each other...?!
When you say tight rap sound i think of Dr. Dre's productions together with Bernie Grundman. "

I'm just talking about the tight, punchy character of those artists. I don't want the 'tight rap' sound (Like Dre or Swiss Beats), but more of a pop tightness, which to me is like hitting cardboard with a drum stick tight low end, but still bright on top. I hope you know where I'm coming from now. Thanks for all the suggestions!

anonymous Tue, 08/10/2004 - 04:05

UncleBob58 wrote: Dr. Dre is the exception to the rule. Every time I try to use reverb or any effects at all when I'm mixing I get "Whu da f#*% is yuh doon?!!" On the flip side, when I'm mixing and no one is in the room, I use effects and when they show up I get "Sounds f#*%ing DOPE!!!"

Go figure.

Hahaha...That happens to me all the time. That's why I don't like mixing with the artist or producer in the room.

Alot of times I do a comparison: one dry and one with reverb & delay...95% of the time, the one with the reverb & delay is what the artist chooses.

anonymous Tue, 08/10/2004 - 04:26

Ooh Ok Sebabong, I see want you want.

Sebabong wrote:
I'm just talking about the tight, punchy character of those artists. I don't want the 'tight rap' sound (Like Dre or Swiss Beats), but more of a pop tightness, which to me is like hitting cardboard with a drum stick tight low end, but still bright on top. I hope you know where I'm coming from now. Thanks for all the suggestions!

You basically answered your question. If your stuff is sounding like Nelly or Lil John, I'm pretty sure that you are using alot of low end(sub frequencies). You basically want to stay away from that. Im not too sure but I assume that the kick drums in those pop tunes resides in the 100hz range, while in those hiphop tracks it's probably in 80hz-60hz range, with some (59hz-20hz) energy. Stay away from that. Also in those pop tracks the bass sits in its own range, while in the HipHop tracks the bass and kicks are usually around those same low frequencies. The bass in those tracks do not dominate the mix as would it in HipHop. When mixing look to create defintion with some low end in the bass, instead of just looking for low end. Also, make sure you have the right drum source. The most phattest drum that would work in a HipHop track wouldn't work in the case that you want.

Just as you said, it all about controlling the low end. This can be done by using the correct compression & Eq. Look for definition instead of just pure energy. As far as the top end, alot of that could be taken care of just by the layering of the track as you said. Look to create depth and bigness in your tracks, by using individual short delay & short reverbs. Basically what you are doing is just opening up your mix.

Mixing is an art not a science, so this is only suggestion and might not work in all situations.

anonymous Wed, 08/11/2004 - 01:23

Thanks 1980! When you say it's all about controlling lowend, what are some good techniques? Are you just talking about EQ? I've tried just EQ'ing and I don't seem to get the results I'm looking for. Is it a gear thang? I mainly use Logic, but use outboard when I mix.

I try to think it's not the gear but the talent, but if I'm chosing the wrong gear, maybe I'm just making bad choices. I've been using Neve gear on bass and kick during the mixdown cause everyone tells me it's the shit. Sorry but, as you already now, I'm kinda a newbie to real studios. Any suggestions you have to get the Pensado sound I'll try until I find what works for me. Thanks a lot.

anonymous Wed, 08/11/2004 - 10:37

Sebabong, you might just be in luck. A friend of mine had this engineering tips book, that I happen to look at yesterday. And they had an interview with David Pensado in it. He revealed some of his techniques, but of course not all.

If you send me a PM with you email address, I will scan the interview for you.