Rimshot Ghost Weave

A lo-fi pattern where low rim accents fill the spaces between structural hits and add conversational movement. Use the sequencer to hear how small timing and velocity shifts reshape the pocket.

Lo-Fi Hip-Hop 4/4 90 BPM Swing 15%

Groove Logic

The rim notes act like conversation inside the bar, filling space without crowding the anchors.

Velocity Mapping

Keep the anchor hits clear, then let the ghosted or conversational notes sit much lower in the mix of the groove. They should imply movement, not demand attention.

Best For

Bedroom pop crossovers, smoky verses, and grooves that need quiet detail.

Human Perspective

A player would drop these in as light comments between the main strokes.

Program This in Your DAW

Set your project to 90 BPM in 4/4 and work on a 16th grid. Start by hearing the bar shape before you decorate it so the groove makes sense from the first hit.

Place the backbeat or main support hits first, then build the kick pattern around them. Add hats and quieter support notes last, because those details only make sense once the main pocket is stable.

When the groove feels right, export MIDI to carry the timing map into your DAW, then replace the sounds if you want. The important lesson is the placement and the velocity contrast, not the exact kit.

If Your Drums Sound Weak

Dryer, shorter drums usually translate better than oversized ones in this lane. Let the velocity contrast create realism before you start stacking more layers or saturation.

If the groove still feels fake, lower the brightness of the hats and make sure the backbeat has a usable center. A modest kit programmed well will beat an expensive kit programmed flat.