Single Rap Beats, Music Loops
MP3 Player - Akai MPC Player - Myspace Player
Hip Hop Misc. Sounds/Videos
This Is Our MPC Player For You To Play Around With, You Can Copy The MPC Code That You Like And Put It On Your Myspace Page Or Your Web Site, Also
If You Want Your Owe MPC (s) Code Made With Your Sounds And Name On It,
We Can Make It For You! Just Hit Us At The Contact Link
You need a Hot Rap Instrumental or hip hop beats for your Demo CD, talent show, or emcee contest. You came to the right site because ideclaremusic.com has a Rap Beats and most likely one for you. Do you have hip hop lyric that needs studio beats, or you're an established artist, record company, film company, sports show, business looking for sick beats? ideclaremusic.com can help Get your hot demo ready. Styles of hip hop genres: underground, old school, mix tape, christian, gangster, freestyle, dirty south, street, west coast and more
If you're a Music Producer? You are going to need this one! We're going to show you all the Top Secrets we use to make hot beat's, from sampling drum loop's, sampling old samples, sampling vocal samples and Tips on mixing Hip Hop music with Protools, Logic Pro, and Reason 3.0, Also we show you how to do the Hi Pitch Vocals Sample with real time BPM!! NO Shipping! just pay and get all your Video Tutorials Full Size Videos With Quick Time Player
What you here and the demos, each sound is tracked out as a Multitrack loop with BPM, And names of the files, Get complete control over the mix? The multitrack beats include full length loops recordings available in 16 bit, and 44.1 kHz. Wave file format, So drop the rap beat loops right in to your Beat Programs Softwares like FL Studio, Logic Pro Studio, Propellerhead Reason, Propellerhead ReCycle, Sony Acid Pro, Pro Tools, Steinberg Cubase, Cakewalk Sonar, Akai MPC that read .wav Any music production & sequencing tools.
We like to look at the history about rap music, So here’s a nice look at the history About The Akai MPC
Akai MPCs (originally MIDI Production Center, now Music Production Center) are a popular and well respected series of electronic musical instruments originally designed by Roger Linn and produced by the Japanese company Akai from 1988 onwards. Intended to function as a powerful kind of drum machine, the MPCs drew on design ideas from machines such as the Sequential Circuits Inc. Studio 440 and the Linn's own Linn 9000, combining a powerful MIDI sequencer with the ability to sample one's own sounds. Later models feature increasingly powerful sampling, storage, interfacing and sound manipulation facilities, which broaden the use of instrument beyond just drum and rhythm tracks.he original MPC60 was designed by Roger Linn, who was hired as a design consultant by Akai. He developed the functional design, including the panel layout and software/hardware specifications. He then created the software with a team of engineers. The hardware electronics were designed by English engineer David Cockerell and his team. Cockerell was a founder member of the synthesizer firm EMS (co-creater of their famous VCS3 along with Peter Zinovieff, and had then worked for effects manufacturers Electro-Harmonix. Shortly after the MPC60's release, the MPC60-II was designed. Released in 1991, the MPC60-II offered most of the same features as the MPC60, with an added headphone output and a plastic housing replacing the original metal one. In 1994, Akai released the MPC3000, which boasted 16-bit, 44 kHz sampling, 32-voice polyphony, and SCSI data transfer. Akai developed and released the MPC2000 without Linn in 1997.It came with 2 MB of RAM, an optional effects board, and a 100,000 note 64-track sequencer. The MPC2000 was replaced by the MPC2000XL in 2000. The MPC2000XL added an improved 300,000 note sequencer, a 64-track mixer and time-stretch and resample features. Four limited edition models of the MPC2000XL were released. In 2002 Akai unveiled the MPC4000, the most powerful MPC to date. The MPC4000 features 8 assignable outputs, a hard drive and CD-ROM drive. The MPC4000's memory can be expanded to up to 512 MB of RAM, the largest amount on an MPC to date. Only two years after the release of the MPC4000, Akai released the MPC1000, which was the smallest in the MPC product line at the time of its release. It is also the first MPC to utilize CompactFlash memory. Both the MPC2500 and the MPC500 were added to the Akai MPC series in 2006. The MPC2500 is a mid-range MPC with 8 assignable outputs and CompactFlash storage. Designed for portability, the MPC500 features 1 MIDI In/Out and CompactFlash storage, and can be powered by 6 AA batteries.
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