It's August 27, 2025, 10:57:46 AM
There is a misconception out there about the MPC. Everyone talks about it, like its essential to every studio, or it has certain "dope" sounds that you cant get from anywhere else. All the MPC is, is a sampler. And very limitted at that. You have to supply your own samples, from gathering them from everywhere, so right out the box, the machine is worthless, unless you allready have a ton of samples to provide it, and when you are feeding in the samples, the memory for the MPC is very limitted...even for the 4000. You can use any virtual sampler (software sampler) like Kontakt, Linplug, anything to do the same exact thing as the MPC. Only thing MPC has thats beneficial, are those big pads that you can bang on to make out a drum line, and you can do that on any keyboard as well. And imagine trying to sequence, and write songs on an MPC...it has a 4 inch screen, and your eyes will bleed after a few hours...or you can just go with a cpu setup, and have a 21 inch screen where you can do ALL your work comfortably without squinting to see every transition you made
There is a misconception out there about the MPC. Everyone talks about it, like its essential to every studio, or it has certain "dope" sounds that you cant get from anywhere else. All the MPC is, is a sampler. And very limitted at that. You have to supply your own samples, from gathering them from everywhere, so right out the box, the machine is worthless, unless you allready have a ton of samples to provide it, and when you are feeding in the samples, the memory for the MPC is very limitted...even for the 4000. You can use any virtual sampler (software sampler) like Kontakt, Linplug, anything to do the same exact thing as the MPC. Only thing MPC has thats beneficial, are those big pads that you can bang on to make out a drum line, and you can do that on any keyboard as well.
Quote from: BIGMOZ on August 06, 2005, 10:43:58 AMIt all depends how you work. I, for instance can't stand sitting in front of a computer screen all day, moving sliders up and down with a mouse, clicking in where I want hits to go, etc, I prefer the more hands on approach that a sampler/drum machine such as an MPC allows me to have. Also, hiphop was built on sampling, so how you gonna put down any machine which encourages you to go and find your own sounds to feed into it, I'd rather having a sampler and a pile of records than any synth keyboard or sound module. Don't get me wrong, if that the way you work, and you make dope stuff on a computer (which listening to your tracks I know you do), then thats cool, but I wouldn't dismiss the MPC, as its at the centre of many hiphop producers equipment. I agree with you though that its all about what works for the individual though. Just because your favourite producer uses certain equipment doesn't mean its gonna be right for you, everyone gotta find what works best for them, and the way they like to go about making music. Oh, and for the record, no way does playing drums on a keyboard even begin the replicate playing them on the pads of an MPC or SP1200.
Yamaha Motif ES 6 man! I'll promote this anyday cause that's what I started off with. More memory on cpu setup's are not a big deal for someone like me. Doing more with less is the way to go, especially as a beginner. DJ Quik is famous for bashing digital recording equipment and computer based productions (Pro Tools, Logic, etc.) Something about his ears rejects the sound of digital and that's common for the older music generation. Some of them integrate analog and digital; some of them go all the way digital, but overall they can all agree on that analog sound that is missed when going digital.
Quote from: Rastaman Vibration on August 06, 2005, 02:44:24 PMQuote from: BIGMOZ on August 06, 2005, 10:43:58 AMIt all depends how you work. I, for instance can't stand sitting in front of a computer screen all day, moving sliders up and down with a mouse, clicking in where I want hits to go, etc, I prefer the more hands on approach that a sampler/drum machine such as an MPC allows me to have. Also, hiphop was built on sampling, so how you gonna put down any machine which encourages you to go and find your own sounds to feed into it, I'd rather having a sampler and a pile of records than any synth keyboard or sound module. Don't get me wrong, if that the way you work, and you make dope stuff on a computer (which listening to your tracks I know you do), then thats cool, but I wouldn't dismiss the MPC, as its at the centre of many hiphop producers equipment. I agree with you though that its all about what works for the individual though. Just because your favourite producer uses certain equipment doesn't mean its gonna be right for you, everyone gotta find what works best for them, and the way they like to go about making music. Oh, and for the record, no way does playing drums on a keyboard even begin the replicate playing them on the pads of an MPC or SP1200.I wasn't dismissing sampling at all. The MPC is a sampler, just like you said. Kontakt, Gigasampler, Mach 5, are all software samplers. They do the EXACT same thing as the MPC (as far as sampling is concerned), and rely on the RAM in your hard drive (which can be up to 4 gigs in cpu's, and MPC2000 only allows 32-64 at the most!). Alot of the guys (Jelly Roll, BC) who use the MPC now, use it because they grew up on it. Software samplers, and computers weren't available at the time, so they grew up, and used the MPC, and really learned it to its maximum ability...so of course they are going to promote it. Its like the age old adage, of old time record producers hating Pro Tools, and digital consoles because it takes away the "warmth" of a record, and its all "computer bits" and not "authentic" equipment. Why do they diss pro tools? Because they grew up with analog equipment, its what they know, so they aren't going to be able to switch over to all digital equipment, and workstation like an SLK, or digidesign icon console, and completely push the product. They would rather sit and work with the faders, and "listen to the music" instead of looking at some computer screen with a bunch of different colors and pretty graphics. It has more to do with ability to adapt, after decades of using one style of equipment. But of course, I agree with you on the feel of the drums thing....because the pads definitely make a difference, but considering the ability to quantize, and shift, and swing all of your music with a sequencer (just like an mpc), you can get the same feel on any machine... Only reason why I say this is I have 2 MPC2000XL, an Akai Z4, and Esi2000 sampler, all which have completely been replaced by my software sampler (not synths....Im not talking synth vs sampling or anything)...