This bass sound will provide a bit of surprise and excitement throughout the drop, giving listeners a reason to keep paying attention. As nice as the main bass is, on its own, it will get a little old. Now we can flesh out our drop with a few more sounds. Step #4: Bass Variations & Other Drop Sounds Want to dive more into sound design? Check out our Breakthrough Sound Design course.
So whatever you do here, don’t overprocess and ruin your sound.Īfter processing the bass, let’s blend the volume with our drums and move on to the next step. Post-processing, like any aspect of sound design, involves balancing experimentation with intentional decisions. So I wanted to bring it out more with the Width knob, as well as control my low-end by using Bass Mono switch. Ableton Utility: Both Serum and Rift add a little stereo information to this bass sound.Ableton Saturator: A little more simple distortion to warm up the sound a little more after the EQ boost.Not super technical or overcomplicated, and sounds good. Ableton Channel EQ: A simple EQ to boost the lows and highs of the sound to add more energy.Since distortion can add unique characteristics to sounds, I tried a bunch of presets until I stumbled upon something I liked.
Minimal Audio Rift: This is a distortion plugin with lots of features.Step #9: Mastering for Maximum Loudnessīefore we get into the steps, there are a few key things you need to know about dubstep.įirst, dubstep tends to sit around 140BPM-150BPM and features a half-time drum pattern.Step #8: Cleaning Up – Mixing & Final Polishes.Step #7: The Post-Drop, Second Drop & Outro.Step #6: Arranging A Strong Intro, Build & Drop.Step #5: Melodic Synths For The Intro Hook.Step #4: Bass Variations & Other Drop Sounds.Post-Processing – Bring The Sound To Life.Step #2: Programming in Intricate Hats & Percussion.Step #1: How To Make An OG Dubstep Drum Pattern.