in case any madlib heads is interested:
"I first discovered the 303 a few years ago, a few months before I went to Brazil for the Red Bull Music Academy. I get bored with just one machine. The 303 turned out to be one of my favorites. I liked the way it looked; I like the feel it had. With the MPC, I can't feel the pads. They're hard. It's like your not hitting shit, theres no response. On the 303 you feel the pads-it lights up when you hit it. And all the effects...That's what got me, really. You buy one machine, it's all on there: wah-wah's, tremelos, filters, pitch shifters, a time stretcher. I figured out how to use the time stretching really quick. It's not the best, but it's good enough for me. But there's too much clicking and pops. Like a scratchy record, but digital. That's something they need fix on it. The quality of the sound is rugged. The 303 makes samples [sound] dirtier. The first beats I made with the 303 ended up as part of the [beat CD series] that started with 100 Beats. My beats on the Jaylib came from those cd's. So did the beats for Madvillain, Dudley Perkins, the DJ Rels album, The Wildchild album. People think i'm using the SP, but basically it's all about the records you use.
"I brought the 303 to Sao Paulo, and I didn't even have a cd burner with me. So I dumped the beats I made to the little cassestte box that was in the hotel. The samples were already fucked up from a portable turntable. That's how I been doing it though. It's working with whatever you have. As long as it records and you get your idea down, it's cool. You record on whatever you have. I'm gonna always keep the 303 formula...."-madlib
"I first discovered the 303 a few years ago, a few months before I went to Brazil for the Red Bull Music Academy. I get bored with just one machine. The 303 turned out to be one of my favorites. I liked the way it looked; I like the feel it had. With the MPC, I can't feel the pads. They're hard. It's like your not hitting shit, theres no response. On the 303 you feel the pads-it lights up when you hit it. And all the effects...That's what got me, really. You buy one machine, it's all on there: wah-wah's, tremelos, filters, pitch shifters, a time stretcher. I figured out how to use the time stretching really quick. It's not the best, but it's good enough for me. But there's too much clicking and pops. Like a scratchy record, but digital. That's something they need fix on it. The quality of the sound is rugged. The 303 makes samples [sound] dirtier. The first beats I made with the 303 ended up as part of the [beat CD series] that started with 100 Beats. My beats on the Jaylib came from those cd's. So did the beats for Madvillain, Dudley Perkins, the DJ Rels album, The Wildchild album. People think i'm using the SP, but basically it's all about the records you use.
"I brought the 303 to Sao Paulo, and I didn't even have a cd burner with me. So I dumped the beats I made to the little cassestte box that was in the hotel. The samples were already fucked up from a portable turntable. That's how I been doing it though. It's working with whatever you have. As long as it records and you get your idea down, it's cool. You record on whatever you have. I'm gonna always keep the 303 formula...."-madlib