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Advice on sampling apps - iOS or Mac
My 14yr old son is getting heavily into rap and hip hop and wants to start creating his own.
He’s messed around with GarageBand on a Mac (ripping samples from YouTube then importing them into the sampler and adding his own beats and recording vocals on top) but I’m sure there must be a better way of doing this.
Can anyone recommend what software might create the simplest workflow either Mac or on iOS/iPadOS?
He’ll not be publishing anything at this stage so not worried about copyright etc.
Thanks
Comments
On iOS/iPadOS, I highly recommend Koala Sampler and all its IAPs (which, if memory serves proper, is $15 or so).
You can even screen record videos from Youtube, import the video in Koala Sampler, and Koala will rip the audio.
@TimRussell jwm speaks truth
Koala is a superb stand-alone sampler
There are a plethora of tutorials out there
And once the basics of Koala are learned, many SP-404 tutorials can be utilized for sampling techniques and little tips n tricks (not a direct 1:1, but close enough for concept/abilities/approaches)
And even better, Koala is compatible with the SP-404.
Just in case someday your son wants to join the hardware game. (But, then again, hardware can be a deep rabbit hole. Just make sure he doesn't discover Eurorack. 🤣 Buying modules for that is more addictive than crack.)
Thanks. I have Koala but have only ever just messed around with it. Is it easy enough to export projects or samples from Koala into a DAW?
I'm not sure since I never exported stems from it. No quick export as far as I'm aware, only recording the "performance" (I usually do sequences one after the other). Someone more knowledgeable will likely come along and educate both of us.
it is possible
Most hip-hop producers use FL Studio, MPC, Maschine, Logic, or Live.
I suggest presenting him with the entry-level options, and see what interests him. He likely already has some ideas.
Also, to all my sampling friends here, consider this advice from Rich the TweakMeister (lightly edited by yours truly for clarity/readability)...
Koala all day!
While it's not a big deal to those who've done it, be sure to understand the workflow of getting a sample into Koala by screen recording and importing the video is ok if doing it on iOS. If he's been ripping on the computer, might like that option better with Koala.
This might be a good series to begin with. Covers all the fundamentals in small sections. Clear and concise.
+1 to anything NervousCook$ related
Dude is a wealth of knowledge, easily digestible, and is a main go-to of mine for both Koala help/ideas and afformentioned transferrable SP-404 concepts
+1 for Koala
It's what initially brought me back to making music. Such immediacy, so much fun. A MIDI controller might be a good idea for Koala as well, it's more fun imo to have physical knobs to twist, faders to push and pads/keys to play.
Yah Maschine desktop software would be a great jumping off point. The latest has good stem separation built in too. Plus there is tons of amazing free desktop stuff.
try serato studio. it’s pretty cool. the basics are easy in it. subscription unfortunately so i’ll probably move on after the trial.