Walk the Moon - Shut Up and Dance (Drums)

Create

Walk the Moon - Shut Up and Dance (Drums)

RVCNon-Voice / Other
Hyperus18/RegalHyperus user image
Hyperus18/RegalHyperus
12 months ago
👀

101

👍

1

🪄

7

Description

This is an RVC drum model trained using Dream-High's Pytorch implementation of "RMVPE: A Robust Model for Vocal Pitch Estimation in Polyphonic Music" and the BeatzForge pretrain on the drum stem of "Shut Up and Dance" (stylized as "SHUT UP + DANCE"), which is a song by American pop rock band Walk the Moon from their third studio album Talking Is Hard (2014).[1] It was written by the band members and songwriters Ben Berger and Ryan McMahon. The song is based on an experience lead singer Nicholas Petricca had at a Los Angeles nightclub. His girlfriend invited him to dance, inspiring the title. Petricca envisioned the song as an anthem for letting go of frustration and having fun. The song was digitally released as the lead single from Talking Is Hard on September 10, 2014. The song became the band's biggest hit single to date, peaking at number four on the Billboard Hot 100 and becoming a number-one hit on the magazine's Alternative Songs chart and the Hot Adult Contemporary chart.[2] Outside of the United States, "Shut Up and Dance" topped the charts in Poland, peaked within the top ten of the charts in Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, the Republic of Ireland, and the United Kingdom, the top 20 of the charts in New Zealand and Sweden, and the top 30 of the charts in the Netherlands. The band has performed "Shut Up and Dance" on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Seth Meyers, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, The Ellen DeGeneres Show and Good Morning America. "Shut Up and Dance" is a pop rock,[13] power pop,[14] synth rock,[15] and alternative rock song[19] that is driven by synthesizer and dance grooves.[13] It incorporates production that is reminiscent of the 1980s, with gated ambience added to the drums, sheeny synth pads, reversed snare 'whooshes', and stadium-sized reverb and delay effects.[20] Steve Baltin and Shirley Halperin of Billboard called the song a "new-wave throwback",[21] while Rolling Stone's Brittany Spanos referred to it as "a Killers-style update on Eighties pop hits" such as "And We Danced" (1985) by the Hooters.[22] Mike Wass of Idolator saw the song as "tapping into a '80s rock sound" similar to the band Bleachers.[23] Ryan Reed of Billboard described Petricca's vocal performance as "flaunt[ing] his emotive yelp" over the track.[17][24] The song makes use of jangling guitars, thunderous pounds, and retro synths that play over a grumbling disco bass.[16][17][23] It additionally includes an open and closed hi-hat pattern, handclaps, and a synth solo.[25] The intro is constructed by two guitar parts, with the first one "playing the arpeggio of the main riff", while the other "play[s] 16th notes on muted strings". According to Maiman, the combination of the two guitars resulted in a "'helicopter' sound", which "is thickened with a dotted eighth note delay set".[26] The main riff itself, also processed with digital delay, was seen as having been influenced by the Edge of U2.[27] "Shut Up and Dance" is largely based on Petricca's experience that night at The Echo, containing specific lyrical references that refer back to it.[3][5] The song finds the singer taking to the dance floor with a female friend who wears "[a] backless dress and some beat up sneaks", referring to her as his "discotheque, Juliet teenage dream".[28][29] The chorus, consisting of two "shut up and dance with me" hook-lines, is accentuated by kick drum hits and accompanied by gang vocals.[20][30] Jeff Miers of The Buffalo News said that the lyrics "boast the sort of everyman relatability that is required of a pop hit".[25] RVC drum models work like RVC voice models, except the purpose of RVC drum models is to change the sounds of one drumkit into that of another. Please credit me if used. Thank you very much! (^^) Sincerely, the one and only RegalHyperus

Comments

No comments yet. Start the conversation!

Add a comment

Samples

New
Classic
1. Singing
Male
English
2. Singing
Female
English
3. Singing (Dry)
Female
English
4. Singing (High)
Female
English
5. Singing 2
Male
English
6. Singing (Dry)
Male
English
7. Singing (Dry, High)
Male
English

Pitch

More to explore

Loading more

Selected Audio
Selected Audio