Tiga Deconstructed – How Does Bugatti Work?

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Tiga Deconstructed – How Does Bugatti Work?

So the legends at Attack Magazine have teamed up with Splice.com, a cloud-based collaboration platform (that producer heads out there should check out ASAP) to technically break down Tiga‘s hit Bugatti and investigate how and why it works as a track.

If you can handle hearing that song one more goddamn time hit play and start today’s lesson in tech house juiciness –

Tiga-Bugatti
  1. ‘Bugatti”s DJ-friendly lead-in comprises 16 bars of the track’s simple kick and 808 snare pattern, supporting the defining lead synth hook that will play throughout most of the track. It’s worth noting the amount of low-end bass content in the kick drum. This is important as the bassline proper doesn’t enter the mix until after the three-minute mark, meaning the kick drum is the main instrument in the extreme low registers.
  2. After 16 bars, a second synth line – riffing off the original – enters the mix. Note that it doesn’t actually enter on the beat, but just before. This is a key feature of the arrangement of the track, with Tiga using repeated instances of anacrusis to subtly lead into new sections. It’s a neat audio trick that is one of several arrangement flourishes in what is otherwise a generally simple structure.
  3. During this section, a third beat element increases in volume: a ride that sounds like a layered mix of sustained live hit and white noise. Two things are apparent from the off: it is mixed low, just filling the gaps between kick and snare, and much of its high end has been rolled away, so it doesn’t interfere with the two synth hooks. It will stay in the background for most of the track.
  4. First instance of the recurring sustained siren/synth stab: a straightforward but effective piece of ear candy.
  5. Just over a minute into the mix, the ride stops its gradual volume increase and is dropped from the mix to make way for the vocals, set against the same kick/snare/synth hook combo that opened the track. Again, note the use of anacrusis, with the word ‘Girl’ sounding before the first beat of bar 33.
  6. Repeating the structural change at bar 17, the second motif is added.
  7. A second instance of the siren/synth stab is layered with a new element: a dirty, fuzzy FX buzz that provides an ever-changing murk in the mix’s lower-mids. Automation of its filter cutoff gives tonal movement to the whole of the bar 49-65 section.
  8. In the first of two mini breakdowns in ‘Bugatti’, the ride and both synth lines are dropped from the mix, leaving the kick and snare alone with the buzz – whose cutoff filter closes down completely  approaching bar 73.
  9. After the buzz fade-out, the synth leads re-enter the mix against the kick/snare backbone… and then shortly afterwards the buzz filter is automated open again to rise back into the mix. This filter rise/fall is a classic arrangement trick for taking down the tension before ratcheting it up again: ideal for the dancefloor.
  10. The vocal returns, this time against the murky background of the now fully filter-opened buzz but, crucially, with no drums at all for the first time in the mix, marking the start of a second quasi-breakdown.
  11. The siren stab gives added FX support to a second instance of the vocals.
  12. The beat returns, supporting the new-to-arrangement bassline. Like the rest of the sounds, it’s simple but brutally effective: a three-note acid-style motif mixed loud and proud at the front of the mix.
  13. It’s all happening now. Just 8 bars after the bassline is introduced, a second new instrument hits the mix: a flighty 808 rimshot groove. The second synth riff is also re-introduced.
  14. When the buzz leaves the mix its previous contribution becomes obvious: suddenly there’s a lot less going on, particularly in the lower mids. A siren stab helps ease the transition.
  15. Tiga’s arrangement isn’t full of wild fills. Indeed, here’s the only time he resorts to any kind of rhythmic turnaround: a full-mix reverse leading into bar 121 and the return of the vocals.
  16. Through this section, the level of the previously low-level ride cymbal is increased to put it centre stage. The return of the buzz at bar 129 brings all main mix elements in for the first and only time in the track. Automation of the buzz filter cutoff continues, opening and closing it subtly over time to keep the ears – and dancefloor – engaged.
  17. The vocals finish, leaving all key musical and beat elements in. The ride cymbal continues to dominate the drum track.
  18. Check the elegantly executed ramp up in pitch of the now dominant ride at bar 145, preceded by a wobbly descent, bringing further gentle attention to what is now the most important element in the mix.
  19. The buzz’s filter cutoff closes down as the track approaches its end. At the same time, the ride cymbal’s playful messing continues during the final 8-bar section, its pitch automated slowly down and then its attack and decay envelopes getting a final tweak in the last four bars.

Source – Attack Magazine / Splice.com

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