
$15.00
1990's brought in a handful of new genres; Nu Metal was one of them.
Instead of long hair, leather and spikes; Nu Metal flirted heavily with the Hip-Hop culture.
Nu Metal Essentials is recommended with 7-string guitars, dreadlocks, sportswear, urban graffiti, sports jerseys, turntables, skateboards, bleached hair & baggy jeans.
What you get:
■ Nearly 90 different beats and fills
■ 10 different basic grooves
■ All drums played live
■ Beats range around 156 – 204bpm
■ Uses General Midi mapping
■ Easily navigable files
Groove List
Not sure how to kickstart your rhythm section? Groove List to the rescue!
We spent hours recording and crafting these grooves to give you the perfect rhythmic foundation for each genre and style. Browse through the Groove List and find the pattern that locks in perfectly with your track!
Grooves:
-
Blind Pump
-
Alive Beat
-
Freaky Beat
-
Baggy Beat
-
Nukie
-
Alone Beat
-
Stupified Beat
-
Eddy Das Beat
-
Divine Beat
-
Ballsy Tongue Beat
Specs:
Nu Metal Essentials by Ugritone is Soundware (samples or presets that load into other products).
Format: MIDIsing the MIDI files:
No special system requirements are needed. Our MIDI files are fully platform-independent and can be used on both 32-bit and 64-bit systems without any issues. Since MIDI files only contain performance data (like notes, velocity, and timing), they are compatible with virtually any DAW or MIDI-capable software, regardless of your operating system or hardware architecture. As long as your setup can load and play MIDI, you're good to go.
Please note: MIDI is not audio!
MIDI files do not contain actual audio or drum sounds. Instead, they store performance data such as which notes are played, when, and how hard. In order to hear sound, you'll need to load the MIDI files into a DAW (Digital Audio Workstation) or any MIDI-compatible software, and assign them to a virtual instrument (like a drum plugin or sampler). This allows you to trigger your own sounds using our professionally crafted grooves.
In other words: MIDI tells your instruments what to play, but not how it sounds. You bring the sound source – we bring the rhythm.