Réponse rapide
Les beats Jersey Club tournent à 130–140 BPM et sont construits sur un pattern de kick à 5 hits atterrissant sur les positions 16e notes 1, 5, 9, 12 et 15. Superposez un SFX de cri de lit, des vocal chops rapides et une basse 808 rebondissante pour compléter le son signature de Newark.
Qu'est-ce que le Jersey Club ? Origines et son
Le Jersey Club est un genre de musique de danse agressif et haute énergie originaire de Newark, New Jersey à la fin des années 1990. Il a été initié par DJ Tameil, Mike V, DJ Black Mic et DJ Tim Dolla du crew Brick Bandits, qui ont adapté les rythmes uptempo du Baltimore club à la scène club de Newark.[1]
DJ Tameil's Dat Butt EP (2001) is widely cited as one of the first self-produced Jersey Club records, burned onto CDs and sold on Broad Street in Newark.[1] The genre has since reached mainstream radio: in 2022, Lil Uzi Vert's Jersey Club-influenced "Just Wanna Rock" (produced with MCVertt) peaked at #10 on the Billboard Hot 100, and Cookiee Kawaii's "Vibe (If I Back It Up)" amassed over 50 million Spotify streams after going viral on TikTok in February 2020.[2][3]
At its core, Jersey Club is defined by three pillars: a bouncing, syncopated kick drum pattern; a percussive bed-squeak sound effect; and rapid-fire vocal chops that function as melodic hooks. If you can lock in those three elements, you have the foundation of the genre.
Référence rapide Jersey Club : Éléments et approche
Before diving into step-by-step construction, use the table below to orient yourself. Every element listed has a defined role in the mix — nothing in Jersey Club is decorative.
| Élément | Approche type | Tempo / Position |
|---|---|---|
| Kick drum | 5-hit syncopated pattern, hard transient, layered for punch | Positions 1, 5, 9, 12, 15 (16th notes) |
| Snare / clap | On beats 9 and 12; add a ghost hit at 11 for groove | Bars alternate slightly for feel |
| Hi-hats | Closed hats on beats 2 and 4; open hat rolls for fills | Straight subdivisions |
| Bed squeak | Rhythmic SFX loop, often synced to kick or off-beat | Loops freely over the pattern |
| 808 bass | Pitched to follow kick; pitch-slides between root notes | F2 → G#2 or per key of track |
| Vocal chops | 1–2 syllable cuts, pitched and repeated rhythmically | Dense 16th-note grid placement |
| Tempo | Classic range; many modern tracks push higher | 130–140 BPM (sweet spot ~137) |
| Arrangement | Loop-first; add/drop elements every 8 bars | 16-bar loops typical |
Le 5-Count Kick : Le moteur signature du Jersey Club
L'élément le plus étudié du Jersey Club est son pattern de grosse caisse. Contrairement au kick four-on-the-floor de la house music ou au kick trap éparse, le Jersey Club utilise une séquence de cinq kicks par mesure qui crée le rebond et l'élan vers l'avant reconnaissables du genre.[4]
The technical description: two quarter-note kicks, followed by two dotted eighth-note kicks, and finally an eighth note. Translated to a 16-step grid (where step 1 = the downbeat), the kicks land on steps 1, 5, 9, 12, and 15. That fifth kick on step 15 — a near-upbeat landing — is what gives Jersey Club its forward pull and distinguishes it from Baltimore club's triplet feel.
Programmation du pattern dans votre DAW
Set your session to 137 BPM as a starting point (the Native Instruments tutorial recommends 142 BPM; either works[4]). Load a kick drum one-shot with a sharp transient — Jersey Club kicks need a distinct click on the attack and enough low-end to feel physical at volume. Enable your step sequencer or piano roll and place kicks at 16th-note positions: 1 → 5 → 9 → 12 → 15. Hit play. That stutter-bounce you hear is the genre.
Layer two or three kick samples to build the full sound. A sub-heavy kick for the low end, a punchier mid-kick for presence, and an optional click layer for clarity in smaller speakers. Keep each layer at the same velocity (100) to maintain the mechanical evenness that the genre demands — Jersey Club kicks do not swing or humanize.
Construction d'un beat Jersey Club pas à pas
- Réglez le tempo et la signature temporelle
Open a new project and set the tempo to 130–140 BPM (try 137 as your default[4]). Use 4/4 time. Create a 2-bar or 4-bar loop as your foundational grid. - Programmez le kick à 5 temps
In your step sequencer or piano roll, place kick hits at 16th-note positions 1, 5, 9, 12, and 15. Use a layered kick with a sharp transient and full sub. Keep velocity consistent. Repeat across all bars — this pattern does not vary bar to bar the way hip-hop kicks do. - Ajoutez les caisses et hi-hats
Place snare or clap hits on positions 9 and 12 in bars 1–3. In bars 2–4, add a ghost snare at position 11 at reduced velocity (~84) for groove dynamics.[4] For hi-hats, place closed hats on beats 2 and 4 (positions 5 and 13 in 16th-note grid terms). Add open hi-hat rolls as fills at phrase endings. - Placez le cri de lit
Load a bed-squeak SFX — that rhythmic, creaking eee-err sound is the genre's most recognizable motif. Cookiee Kawaii's viral "Vibe (If I Back It Up)" used squeaks from Trillville's "Some Cut"[3] — but royalty-free bed-squeak samples are widely available. Place the squeak as a rhythmic loop running against the kick. Offset it slightly from the kick to keep the two from masking each other. - Construisez la basse 808
Create a pitched 808 bass following the kick pattern's rhythm. Switch pitches every few bars to create harmonic movement — for example, F2 → G#2 → G2 is a common starting sequence.[4] Apply a high-pass filter on the kick drum itself (cutoff around 16%) to carve space for the 808's sub frequencies. - Découpez et séquencez les samples vocaux
Select a vocal and chop it to individual syllables or short 2–4 note phrases. Pitch each chop up or down to create melodic movement. Place chops on a dense 16th-note or 8th-note grid — they should feel like an additional percussion layer, not a verse delivery. Repeat a single syllable 4–8 times in a row for the genre's signature stutter effect. Jersey Club vocals are deconstructed: the source material becomes rhythm. - Arrangez en blocs de 8 mesures
Jersey Club arrangement is loop-first: build your core 8-bar loop, then create variation by adding or dropping elements at 8-bar boundaries. A typical structure: bars 1–8 intro (kick + bed squeak only), bars 9–16 full drop (all elements), bars 17–24 strip back (remove vocals or bass), bars 25–32 full reload, final 8 bars gradual wind-down. Avoid complex chord-verse-chorus structures — the energy lives inside the percussion loop, not traditional song form. - Mixez pour la piste de danse
Jersey Club is dance music. Mix decisions should serve the body: the kick needs physical weight (12–16 Hz sub presence), the bed squeak should sit mid-high and cut through, and vocal chops should be bright and loud enough to be intelligible at speaker volume. Sidechain the 808 to the kick lightly if needed to prevent low-end clashing, but avoid over-compression that kills the pattern's stutter energy.
Cri de lit et vocal Chops : Plongée profonde
Deux éléments séparent le Jersey Club de la musique de club générique : le cri de lit et le traitement des vocal chops. Les deux sont immédiatement reconnaissables et nécessitent une technique de production spécifique pour être exécutés correctement.
Le cri de lit
The bed squeak — a rhythmic, squeaky-spring sound often described as eee-err eee-err — has become the genre's most iconic motif. It appears on countless tracks across Jersey Club's history. Royalty-free bed-squeak samples are available on platforms like Sample Focus, Looperman, and in dedicated Jersey Club drum kits. When placing it in your arrangement, treat it as a percussive texture rather than a melodic element: it occupies the upper-mid frequency space and its job is rhythmic punctuation, not pitch.
Placement matters: the squeak typically runs as a loop alongside the kick, but it works best when it lands on the off-beat or between kick hits rather than directly on top of them. This prevents the two from masking each other in the mix and keeps both elements clearly audible on a club system.
Technique de vocal chop
Jersey Club vocal chops are not hooks in the traditional sense — they are rhythm instruments made out of voice. The approach: take a vocal (your own recording, an acapella, or a sample), isolate individual syllables or short phrases, and place them on your piano roll at specific pitches across a 16th-note grid. A single syllable repeated eight times at slightly varying pitches creates the genre's characteristic vocal groove.
Common technique: take a two-syllable word, assign the first syllable to one pitch and the second to a note a fourth or fifth up, then repeat the pattern 4–8 times. Pitch the entire sequence up or down to match your track's key. Chops should be tight — trim silence at the start and end of each slice to prevent muddiness. Apply a short reverb (pre-delay near zero, decay under 0.5 seconds) to glue chops together without washing out the rhythm.
Tempo, bounce et arrangement
La fourchette 130–140 BPM du Jersey Club n'est pas arbitraire — c'est le tempo précis auquel le pattern de kick à 5 temps génère la réponse physique maximale sur une piste de danse.[1]
The genre has evolved: earlier Brick Bandits-era tracks sat closer to 130 BPM, while the internet era pushed producers toward 140 BPM and beyond, with some modern Jersey Club tracks running at 150 BPM or faster.[1] For a first beat, staying at 135–140 BPM gives you the clearest, most accessible version of the sound.
Bounce comes from the interplay between the kick pattern's syncopation and the bass line's pitch movement. If your beat feels flat, check two things: first, verify the kick is landing on positions 1, 5, 9, 12, and 15 (not a simplified four-on-the-floor substitution); second, ensure the 808 bass actually moves between pitches rather than sustaining one drone note. Static bass kills the genre's momentum.
- Intro (mesures 1–8) Kick and bed squeak only. Let the pattern establish itself before adding other elements. This is how DJs transition into a track in a club context.
- Drop (mesures 9–16) Full arrangement: kick, snare, hi-hats, bed squeak, 808 bass, and vocal chops all enter together. Maximum energy.
- Dépouillé (mesures 17–24) Remove one or two elements — drop the bass line or pull out the vocal chops. The pattern continues but the space creates anticipation for the reload.
- Rechargement (mesures 25–32) All elements return. Often the loudest, most energetic section. Use a riser or noise sweep into the bar 25 downbeat.
- Décélération (mesures 33–40) Progressively remove elements. End on the kick-and-squeak combo from the intro to leave the door open for a DJ mix-out.
Samples, drum kits et ressources essentielles
La production Jersey Club est riche en samples par tradition. Les premiers enregistrements du genre ont été construits sur des disques Baltimore club, des boucles de Chicago house et des coupures vocales R&B — retravaillées et recontextualisées pour la piste de danse de Newark.[1]
For producers starting out, a dedicated Jersey Club drum kit saves significant time. You need: a layered kick with sub and click, a crisp snare or clap, closed and open hi-hat one-shots, and a bed-squeak SFX. Platforms like Output, Sample Focus, and Loopmasters offer Jersey Club-specific kits and loops. Free drum kits are also available if you're working within a tight budget — prioritize kick quality over anything else, since the pattern depends on a strong transient.
Sur quoi travailler ensuite
Le Jersey Club récompense la répétition. Construisez le 5-count kick d'abord, verrouillez-le à 137 BPM, puis ajoutez chaque élément couche par couche.
Once your first Jersey Club beat is working, expand your skills in adjacent areas: vocal chop technique applies directly to other electronic genres, the bounce and syncopation philosophy carries into hip-hop production, and understanding how Jersey Club diverged from house music gives you context for house production as well. Chord movement and harmony become more important as you move beyond loops — chord progressions built for producers cover that ground.
Parcourez les drum kits Jersey Club gratuits et packs de samples dans les bibliothèques Plugg Supply.
Parcourir les téléchargements gratuitsLearning path
Related answer hubs
Related catalog
More tutorials from the catalog
More tutorials from the Plugg Supply feed, ranked by catalog popularity.
Udemy Sail Through the ABRSM Grade 5 Music Theory Exam [TUTORiAL]
Seed To Stage Songwriting and Composition in Ableton Live [TUTORiAL]