Over four hours of in-depth tutorial videos by multi-genre producer of 20 years and university lecturer Nomine aka Outrage, this extensive course goes deep into creating Jungle; a high octane genre that has been cemented in the international electronic music scene since the 90s. This course provides a deep understanding of the jungle/drum and bass sounds that have inspired many genres such as drum and bass, UK garage, dubstep, grime and many more. Nomine’s detailed course is presented meticulously while sharing an expert approach to engineering and refined production methodology. Not content to just show you what he does, the course is also packed with workflow tips and tricks to transport your production abilities to the next level.
Module 1: Introduction to the Breakbeat
Module 2: Sourcing and Re-sequencing Breakbeats
Module 3: Creating the Classic ‘Funky Drummer’ and ‘Amen’ Breaks
Module 4: Layering Drum Hits and Individual Drum Processing
Module 5: Adding Additional Drum Sounds
Module 6: Creating Bass Options
Module 7: Tuning the Percussion and Breaks
Module 8: Alternative Bass Parts 1
Module 9: Alternate Bass Parts 2
Module 10: The Track So Far Part 1
Module 11: Adding Strings
Module 12: Music Theory in Production
Module 13: Creating a Chord Progression
Module 14: Creating Melodic Part 1 Bleeps
Module 15: The Track So Far Part 2
Module 16: Scale Quantisation
Module 17: Creating Melodic Parts 2: Dissonant Pad and Mentaz Sample
Module 18: Sound Effects
Module 19: Finishing the ‘Boiling Pot’
Module 20: Preparing for Arrangement 1
Module 21: Preparing for Arrangement 2
Module 22: Creating the Intro
Module 23: Building the First Drop and Breakdown
Module 24: Creating the Main Drop
Module 25: Refining the Breakdown
Module 26: Wrap Up
Course Features
- Lectures 26
- Quiz 0
- Duration Lifetime access
- Skill level All levels
- Language English
- Students 207
- Assessments Yes
Curriculum
- 1 Section
- 26 Lessons
- Lifetime
- 26
- 1.1Module 1: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Introduction To The Breakbeat
- 1.2Module 2: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Sourcing And Re-Sequencing Breakbeats
- 1.3Module 3: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating The Classic ‘Funky Drummer’ And ‘Amen’ Breaks
- 1.4Module 4: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Layering Drum Hits And Individual Drum Processing
- 1.5Module 5: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Adding Additional Drum Sounds
- 1.6Module 6: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating Bass Options
- 1.7Module 7: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Tuning The Percussion And Breaks
- 1.8Module 8: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Alternative Bass Parts: Part 1
- 1.9Module 9: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Alternate Bass Parts: Part 2
- 1.10Module 10: Jungle Production Fundamentals – The Track So Far: Part 1
- 1.11Module 11: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Adding Strings
- 1.12Module 12: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Music Theory In Production
- 1.13Module 13: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating A Chord Progression
- 1.14Module 14: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating Melodic Parts – Part 1: Bleeps
- 1.15Module 15: Jungle Production Fundamental – The Track So Far – Part 2
- 1.16Module 16: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Scale Quantisation
- 1.17Module 17: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating Melodic Parts 2: Dissonant Pad And Mentasm Sample
- 1.18Module 18: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Sound Effects
- 1.19Module 19: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Finishing The ‘Boiling Pot’
- 1.20Module 20: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Preparing For Arrangement – Part 1
- 1.21Module 21: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Preparing For Arrangement – Part 2
- 1.22Module 22: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating The Intro
- 1.23Module 23: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Building The First Drop And Breakdown
- 1.24Module 24: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Creating The Main Drop
- 1.25Module 25: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Refining The Breakdown
- 1.26Module 26: Jungle Production Fundamentals – Wrap Up
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11 Comments
Hi Nomine
Just wanted to say this has been invaluable. Massive thanks.
Now i’m gonna get stuck into those mixing and mastering tutorials…
Peace!
has junglebreaks.co.uk been taken down? I can’t seem to access it and get the message “this site cant be reached”
same problem as well?
Hey, That site has unfortunately been removed now but you can try this: https://www.whosampled.com
Great insight……I need another life to watch all this content ?
Thank you
✌?
🙂 we should do a tutorial on ‘how to clone yourself’. Then you could watch as much content as you want 🙂
Is there any advice you’d give when chopping and layering your different breakbeats – I presume they need to have unified elements? iIn this example it sounds like they are harmonising … is that from chopping each breakbeat in the same way then layering?
Hey, the one thing I am very conscious of when layering breakbeats or any drums at all is phase issues. I also think that the tone and pitch of the drums need to be sitting nicely together too. I would simply experiment with the pitch of each hit and go by ear and when it sounds right, it sounds right 🙂 In regards to the phase issues I am talking about, we are today publishing an in-depth course all to do with phase, how it works, the problems you may face and most importantly, how to resolve the issues. This will be ready for all of you to view by 5 PM GMT today.
Should we be aware of copyright issues when working with famous breaks like this? As far as I’m aware nobody has ever been sued for Amen Brother, but what about other breaks? Would it be safe to use them after some degree of processing, or is it better to find recreated beats in sample packs and suchlike?
What is the name of this break?
This seems like a decent replacement for the jungle breaks site that has been taken down since this video was recorded.
http://rhythm-lab.com/breakbeats