Can i make a 808-Kick-Drum with the Donner B1?

adminBlogSounddesign1 month ago38 Views

Yes — you absolutely can make an 808-style kick drum with the Donner B1 👍
It’s not a sampler, but the B1 has exactly what an 808 kick needs: a sine-like tone, a pitch drop, and a short amp envelope.

Below is a clear, practical guide to dial one in.


How an 808 Kick Works (Quick Context)

A classic 808 kick is basically:

  • a pure low-frequency tone (almost a sine wave)
  • with a fast pitch drop at the start
  • and a short or medium decay

That’s it. No filter tricks, no effects magic.


Donner B1 – 808 Kick Setup

1. Oscillator

  • Waveform: Triangle (best)
    • If triangle isn’t available: use saw with the filter fully closed
  • Octave: Lowest possible (16’ or lower if available)

Why:
Triangle is closest to a sine wave → smooth, subby low end.


2. Filter (Keep It Simple)

  • Filter Type: Low-pass
  • Cutoff: Very low (almost closed)
  • Resonance: 0–10%

The filter is only there to remove harmonics if you’re using a saw.


3. Amp Envelope (The Body of the Kick)

  • Attack: 0
  • Decay: Short to medium
  • Sustain: 0
  • Release: Short

Guidelines:

  • Short decay → classic tight 808
  • Longer decay → modern trap-style 808 kick

4. Pitch Envelope (MOST IMPORTANT PART)

If the Donner B1 allows pitch modulation via envelope:

  • Pitch Env Amount: Medium to high
  • Pitch Env Decay: Very short
  • Pitch Env Attack: 0

What this does:

  • High pitch at the start = “click”
  • Fast drop = “thump”

If pitch envelope is limited:

  • Use very fast glide as a workaround (short notes only)

5. Glide / Portamento

  • Glide: Off (for classic 808 kicks)

(Glide is great for 808 basses, not for kicks.)


Playing Technique (Important)

  • Play very short MIDI notes
  • One note per hit
  • Best pitch range: C1–D2
  • Tune the kick to the key of your track

Optional Enhancements (Highly Recommended)

Saturation / Drive (External)

  • Very subtle distortion
  • Makes the kick audible on small speakers

Compression

  • Fast attack
  • Medium release
  • Just to control peaks

EQ

  • Boost around 50–60 Hz
  • Optional click boost around 2–4 kHz

Quick Variations

Classic 808 (Old School)

  • Short decay
  • Very fast pitch drop
  • No distortion

Modern Trap 808 Kick

  • Longer decay
  • Slight saturation
  • Tune carefully to the song key

Clicky 808 Kick

  • Slightly higher pitch envelope amount
  • Tiny bit of resonance
  • Add transient shaper after recording

Limitations to Be Aware Of

  • The Donner B1 can’t fully replace a sampled 808
  • Pitch envelope depth may be limited
  • No built-in transient shaper

👉 But for analog-style 808 kicks, demos, and live jams — it works surprisingly well.


Bottom Line

✅ Yes, the Donner B1 can create a convincing 808-style kick drum
Best suited for:

  • hip-hop
  • trap
  • electro
  • live hardware jams

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