As the first digital drum machine to be sold to the public, the Linn LM-1 was the manufacturer’s way of testing the waters. With the LM-1 being both a commercial and critical hit it didn’t take long for competitors to follow suit. Wasting no time, Oberheim got to work and released their take on a drum machine: the DMX.
Released in 1981, the DMX featured tuning abilities for each drum sound, as well as swing functions, rolls and timing variations in an attempt to create a machine that could play as close to a human drummer as possible.
Its realistic and easily manipulated sounds meant that it quickly became a favourite for producers, going on to influence the then-emerging new wave and hip-hop genres. The best-known song to feature the DMX is New Order’s seminal classic, Blue Monday, as well as Herbie Hancock’s commercial hit, Rock-It. Slick Rick and Run DMC both used the DMX on their debut albums, and rapper DMX even named himself after the classic drum machine.
This template contains 30 drum samples of the Oberheim DMX. You can change the current drum sample that is loaded in the sample channel by clicking the folder on the sample channel and selecting a new sample.
The mixer is preloaded with native FX and routed. You have 1 main bus for a master with 3 sub-masters. These 3 sub-masters are Drums, Synths and Vocals. These 3 sub-masters are routed into the Master Bus. Color coded groups of sounds are routed into the submasters. This gives you full control over your individual sounds plus groups of sounds.
These templates are created so you can open them and go. I see many templates that you cannot even open b/c they use so many plugins that are not native to FL Studio. Meaning they may use plugins you do not have. And if you do get it open, you will spend time deleting all the production just to get space to write your own thing on said template. Our templates are designed to open and go! We are out to make the start of your project much easier starting from scratch.
Validate your login