I heard a great interpretation of Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game” by Groovy Waters. Their work inspired me to create a down-tempo PSR/Tyros style with break beats that would let me jam over the changes (Bm-A-E-E).
And that led me into a whole new exploration in Motif/MOX and PSR/Tyros styles!
While goofing around with the Yamaha MOX6 workstation, I stumbled into some break beats with “8Z” in the name. I noticed that the “8Z” arpeggios are targeted for voices with “8Z” in their names. So, what is this “8Z” business?
The Motif XS (and MOX) added 8-zone drum kits and arpeggios, hence, the “8Z” in the names. A conventional drum kit has dozens of individual percussion sounds laid out across the MIDI note range (AKA “the keyboard”). An 8-zone kit is an extension of a regular synth voice where each voice element is assigned a percussion sound. The usual upper and lower note limits determine the key range for each sound. Here is the element information for the PRE8:060 “8Z Romps” voice:
Name Note# ---------- --------- Waveform Low High Low High ---------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- BD T9-4 C0 C1 24 36 SD Elec7 C#1 F1 37 41 China St F#1 C2 42 48 SD Rim SE C#2 C3 49 60 Bd Jungle 2 C#3 F#3 61 66 Bd Distortion4 G3 C4 67 72 Bd Distortion RM C#4 C5 73 84 Bd D&B2 C#5 C6 85 96
Each waveform is stretched across a multi-key zone. Thus, each of the notes within a zone have a slightly pitch-shifted tone, allowing for tonal variation in patterns where repeated notes are played in sequence. Since these are basically regular synth voices, you are also free to mess about with the filter, amplitude envelope and all the usual sound design goodies.
The arpeggios designed for the “8Z Romps” voice do just that. (See “MA_8Z Romps” and so forth.) The pitch shift, etc. breaks up the monotony of repeated notes.
The “8 zone” idea makes it easy to cobble new drum kits together from the diaspora of waveforms in the regular drum kits. You probably don’t need more than eight different percussion sounds for a set of basic beats. A quick survey of other “8Z” kits shows this to be true:
8Z HeavyHearts 8Z Chilly Breakz 8Z Gated Beatz -------------- ---------------- -------------- Bd T9-1 Bd HipHop6 Bd Gate Bd Hard Long Sd HipHop9 Bd HipHop9 SD Elec12 Sd T8-1 Sd HipHop6 Sd HipHop6 HH Closed T8-2 Sd Hip Gate HH Closed D&B HH Open T8-2 HH Closed T8-1 HH Open T9 Electric Perc1 HH Open T8-1 Clap AnSm Sleigh Bell Noise Burst Shaker Hip 2 Shaker Hip 1 Shaker Hip 1
These kits have a different key layout than “8Z Romps”. In fact, these 8Z kits have a few zones that resemble the conventional kit layout — the bass drums (Bd) cover the notes where bass drum is usually found, the snare drums (Sd) cover the usual notes for snare drum, etc. Thus, you can play “regular” drum arpeggios through these 8Z voices and they sound just fine. The upper range elements cover a wide range of notes and are the “catch all” for the usual percussion spice such as conga, shakers, guiro, triangle and the like. With the pitch shifting, the “catch all” approach can produce some hip patterns.
There is far more fun to be had. I came across the “8Z” kits and arpeggios while playing the Performance USR2:102(G06) Ibiza Growl Sax. This Performance had the feel that I was looking for, although I wasn’t too pleased with the sax voice. (A problem that is easily fixed.) The Performance assigns “8Z Romps” to the first voice, but, wait! It plays break beats through “8Z Romps” that were not designed for “8Z Romps”, having different zones, etc. Cool. Yamaha sound designers are not only good at following the rules, they are equally adept at breaking the rules, too.
I decided to go ahead with the break beats from Ibiza Growl Sax even though the PSR/Tyros do not have “8Z” drum kits. I had to unwind all of the 8Z-ness and map the percussion voices to standard PSR-S950 drum kits. Unfortunately, the repetitive patterns are a little bit plain even though the musical feel is still good.
Next up, crushing the drums and bouncing them around.