Core garage rhythm
The first pass established a 64-bar 2-step garage drum structure with swung sixteenths, syncopated kicks, backbeat snare and clap, ghost notes, open-hat skips, and small fills every four bars.
static process archive · v01
A 64-bar UK garage beat built from programmed 2-step drums, phrase-level variation, and a final rendered arrangement. The raw source samples are intentionally not included in this website.
how it was made
The first pass established a 64-bar 2-step garage drum structure with swung sixteenths, syncopated kicks, backbeat snare and clap, ghost notes, open-hat skips, and small fills every four bars.
The groove was arranged so every four bars had a pickup or fill, every eight bars had a stronger turnaround, and bars 16, 32, 48, and 64 acted as larger section markers.
The uploaded audio was analysed for duration and tempo alignment. The final version was set to 140 BPM because the loops aligned naturally to one-, two-, four-, eight-, and sixteen-bar divisions at that tempo.
The final bounce used chopped drum hits, supporting loop layers, harmonic beds, turnarounds, and transition accents. This website contains the rendered result and MIDI only, not the original source sample files.
abbreviated build transcript
The artefact came from a compact back-and-forth: a request for a garage beat, a supplied sample pack, and a final instruction to document the result as a static process site. This edited transcript keeps the practical shape of the exchange without exposing the raw samples.
What tools do you have for music generation, MIDI, constructing synthesisers, or effects using DSP?
The container is strongest for Python-based MIDI, synthesis, offline DSP, WAV rendering, and analysis. It can generate MIDI files, render audio, process signals, and export useful project artefacts.
Create me a garage beat: 64 bars, with variations every four and eight bars.
A first 64-bar UK garage drum pattern was generated, using a 2-step kick structure, swung sixteenths, snare and clap backbeats, ghost notes, open hats, four-bar fills, and stronger eight-bar turnarounds.
Take a look at these little samples and integrate them into what we have already.
The sample pack was inspected for usable one-shots, loops, durations, and tempo alignment. The final track was moved to 140 BPM because the uploaded material lined up naturally at that tempo.
The final render used the supplied kick, snare, and hat as chopped drum sources, then added beat-loop support, pad material, melodic phrases, clangs, accents, and transition throws across the 64-bar arrangement.
Change this into a static information website that shows how we made the final artefact. Feature the end result prominently and describe the process underneath.
This site packages the final render, MIDI, waveform image, arrangement notes, and process write-up. It deliberately omits the raw source samples.
implementation
Create a 64-bar UK garage beat, add variation every four and eight bars, integrate a private sample pack, and turn the finished artefact into a static website that documents the process without publishing the raw samples.
I generated a Python program that treated the work like an offline mini-DAW session. It loaded the private WAV files locally, chopped the drum samples into one-shots, aligned the loop material at 140 BPM, scheduled MIDI drum events across 64 bars, layered musical beds and transition accents, then rendered the final stereo WAV and matching MIDI file.
The finished audio, MIDI, waveform, metadata, and source generator are included. The raw sample files are not included, so the site can explain the process without redistributing your source material.
The full script is included as a public process artefact. It documents the actual construction logic: sample loading, tempo alignment, drum event scheduling, four/eight-bar variation rules, arrangement layers, and final render/export.
Download build-track-v01.pydef build():
sample_dir = prepare_samples()
source = {path.name: load_audio(path) for path in sample_dir.glob("*.wav")}
# 1. Chop the uploaded kick, snare, and hat files into one-shot drum sources.
# 2. Program a 64-bar 2-step garage rhythm with swung 16ths.
# 3. Add four-bar fills, eight-bar transitions, and larger section changes.
# 4. Arrange the musical loops as beds, accents, and turnarounds.
# 5. Render the final stereo WAV and export matching MIDI.
arrangement map
technical notes
The site is plain HTML, CSS, and a small JavaScript file. The splash page features the final WAV render prominently, plus a MIDI download for reuse in a DAW. The waveform image was generated from the final render. The raw sample pack is not copied into the site and is not required for playback.
uk-garage-artifact-v01/
├── index.html
├── styles.css
├── script.js
├── scripts/
│ └── build-track-v01.py
└── assets/
├── uk-garage-artifact-v01-final.wav
├── uk-garage-artifact-v01-final.mid
├── uk-garage-artifact-v01-waveform.png
└── metadata.json