![]() Collab calls should go in the Collaboration Thread. All products/services should go in the Marketplace Thread. All postings of your own music (thread or comment) for any reason should go in the Feedback thread. Weekly Threads are listed in the top bar.We occasionally will make exceptions to threads that create insightful discussion. Use the subreddit search, read the Ira Glass quote, or check out other subreddits such as /r/getmotivated. Lower-effort "motivational" threads asking how to get through an artistic slump may be removed because they've been answered quite a few times before.If your post is calling someone out for something, it's probably not appropriate here. This is a community for the technical aspects of production and for production discussion, not drama. This is not the place for posts about discovering people stealing songs from other artists or producers using ghost writers, etc.7 day ban on first offense, permanent ban thereafter. Linking to piracy-centric subs also prohibited. Advocating, asking for, or giving advice on how to pirate is prohibited.If you're not sure if your post will fit or not, message the moderators. Users posting links to tracks for views or feedback, soliciting/offering services, promoting fan pages, using follow-gates/download-gates, or otherwise benefiting financially from the sub will be banned for a day and informed to read the rules. Spam & self-promotion (outside of the Marketplace thread, where ads are encouraged) will be removed.Keep it productive, intelligent, intelligible, and constructive.If your thread is vague, unclear, or easily answered by searching ("does anyone else.?" "Any suggestions for.?") it may be removed. If your thread is only tangentially related, it is probably considered off-topic. Please submit only content and discussion that is specifically relevant to music production.Repeated or egregious offenses will be countered with a ban. If you disagree with something, make your case politely. No flame wars, disrespect, condescension based on level of experience, or tactless posts stereotyping any group of people will be tolerated. Posts and comments are expected to be civil, even when there are disagreements. ![]() Please report threads and comments that violate the following rules: Be respectful In this walkthrough and its accompanying video, we'll take you through six fundamental programming techniques guaranteed to get your hi-hats sounding like the real thing.This subreddit is for those wishing to discuss electronic dance music production. Standard practice is to have the offbeat strokes at lower velocity than those on the beat, which is how a drummer would generally play them. Programming realistic hi-hats isn't difficult, but the key to authenticity lies in thoughtfully combining the various articulations offered by your virtual drum kit (you need at least closed tip, closed shoulder, pedalled, half open and full open samples, preferably with round robins) and making good use of velocity. Very broadly speaking, they're usually played on every eighth- or 16th-note in a pattern, constantly and relentlessly, pausing only when the stick that would strike them at any given point is required by another kit element. By striking the top cymbal with drumsticks and opening and closing them with the pedal, a surprisingly broad array of sounds can be elicited. A pair of cymbals, usually 13" or 14" in diameter, mounted face to face on a footpedal-operated stand, the hi-hats sit to the left of the snare drum in a right-handed drum kit.
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