Drum 4 Drum.com

Welcome to Drum 4 Drum.com Your Home for your Production Needs! Offering Drumkits, Tutorials, Production Information, and Various other services for todays producer.

Unique Hard to Find Kits

We Understand That Everyone from The Top Producers in the game, to The Bedroom Producer Have one thing in common! They Want good drum Sounds! Doesn't Matter whether you use Hardware or Software..The Drums Gotta KNOCK!!

DNA of Production

A Video Collection of Producers, Composers, and Hip Hop Moguls. As a producer, Sometimes you lose Inspiration. It Happens to all of us, we will collect and distribute videos that keep us motivated to bring good sounds to you, and also educate you about hip hop, production and more

Sound Quality

Our Drum Samples Have been Tweeked, Equalized, Compressed, Bit Crunched, to give you some of the most Pristine Quality Drums you will find on the Net. These Drumkits have been collected, chopped over a 8 year period of time. Top of the line Sound Quality

You Have Heard Our Samples on

We Have had our samples on the radio, MTV, BET, VH1, also featured on Popular Television shows such as: Tiny and Toya Season 2, The Mike Vick Project, Trey Songz My Moment and More. Click Here to Read More!

Latest Posts






J Dilla 

James Dewitt Yancey (February 7, 1974 – February 10, 2006),[1] better known by the stage names J Dilla and Jay Dee, was an Americanrecord producer who emerged from the mid-1990s underground hip hop scene in Detroit, Michigan. According to his obituary at NPR.org, he "was one of the music industry's most influential hip-hop artists, working for big-name acts like De La Soul, Busta Rhymes and Common."[2]
Yancey's career began slowly. He has now become highly regarded, most notably for the production of critically acclaimed albums byCommonBusta RhymesA Tribe Called QuestThe Pharcyde, and Erykah Badu. He was a member of Slum Village and produced their acclaimed debut album Fan-Tas-Tic (Vol. 1) and their follow-up Fantastic, Vol. 2.[1]
In the early 2000s, Yancey's career as a solo artist began to improve; A solo album Welcome 2 Detroit was followed by a collaborative album with California producer MadlibChampion Sound, which catalyzed the careers of both artists. Just as his music was becoming increasingly popular, Yancey died in 2006 of the blood disease TTP.
Following J Dilla's death, the hip hop community became centered upon his music and image.[3] Many of the artists with whom Yancey worked performed or recorded tributes, and a large group of followers voiced their support for the late musician. Yancey's music experienced a rebirth as the producer gained many times more listeners than he had during his life, partly due to media exposure. Though several posthumous albums have been released and others are planned, the massive amounts of unreleased recordings by the producer remain somewhat undetermined. Yancey's estate has also been controverted.[4]

(taken from Wikipedia)


ScrapDirty Captures Vintage footage of the Original Slum Village Reels being tracked to Pro-Tools








You Must Respect Real HIP HOP....

R.I.P - J DILLA -




SOUNDMAN

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