跳至主要内容

Deep House Production Guide: Grooves, Chords, and Signature Sound

经过 Plugg Supply Team

Deep House Production Guide: Grooves, Chords, and Signature Sound

Deep house is one of the most enduring and beloved genres in electronic music. Born in Chicago in the 1980s and refined in New York and later London, it combines the four-on-the-floor pulse of house music with soulful chords, warm basslines, and an intimate, underground atmosphere. This guide covers the production techniques behind deep house — from the groovy basslines and jazzy chords to the warm, analog-inspired sound that defines the genre.


What Is Deep House?

Deep house is a subgenre of house music characterized by:

  • Warm, analog-inspired sound — Emulating vintage synthesizers and drum machines
  • Complex chord progressions — Jazz and soul-influenced harmonies
  • Groovy, melodic basslines — Bass that functions as both rhythm and melody
  • Intimate, underground atmosphere — Designed for small clubs and late nights
  • Soulful vocals — Often featuring R&B-influenced singers

Key Artists and Labels

Artist/Label Style Reference Tracks
Larry Heard Pioneering, soulful "Can You Feel It," "Mystery of Love"
Moodymann Detroit, eclectic, sample-based "Shades of Jae," "I Can't Kick This Feeling"
Kerri Chandler Garage-influenced, bass-heavy "Rain," "Atmosphere"
Deep House Amsterdam Modern, global Various compilations
Anjunadeep Melodic, progressive-influenced Various releases
Defected Classic, vocal-driven Various releases

Tempo and Groove

BPM Range

Deep house sits at 120–125 BPM, with most tracks around 122–124 BPM.

Substyle BPM Feel
Classic Deep House 120–122 Groovy, relaxed, intimate
Modern Deep House 122–125 Slightly more driving, club-oriented
Deep Tech 124–128 More minimal, techno-influenced

The Deep House Groove

The groove in deep house comes from:

  • Bouncy bassline — The bass plays between the kicks, creating a pushing feel
  • Swing — 10–15% swing on hi-hats and percussion for a human feel
  • Subtle percussion — Shakers, congas, and bongos add organic texture
  • Space — Every element has room to breathe

Drum Programming

The Kick

The kick in deep house is warm and consistent:

  • Four-on-the-floor — Steady and unrelenting
  • Warm and round — Emphasis on 60–100 Hz, not too clicky
  • Medium decay — Long enough to feel, short enough to stay tight
  • Sidechain trigger — Drives sidechain compression on bass

The Clap/Snare

  • Layered clap and snare — Clap for width, snare for body
  • Off-beat placement — Sometimes slightly delayed for groove
  • Reverb — Medium to long reverb for space
  • Compression — Medium compression for punch

Hi-Hats and Percussion

Deep house percussion is subtle but essential:

Element Pattern Notes
Closed hi-hats 1/8 or 1/16 notes Steady, subtle swing
Open hats Off-beats Adds groove and bounce
Shaker 1/16 notes Continuous, subtle drive
Congas Syncopated Adds Latin flavor and groove
Bongos Sparse Light texture

Bassline Design

The Deep House Bass

The bassline is the heart of deep house:

Characteristics:

Feature Description
Melodic — Follows the chord progression or creates counter-melodies
Warm and round — Subtractive synth or recorded bass guitar
Slightly saturated — Tape or tube saturation for warmth
Sidechained — Ducks under the kick
Groovy — Plays between the kicks, creating a pushing feel

Bass Sound Design

Option 1: Recorded Bass Guitar

  • Use a real bass guitar (Fender Jazz Bass, Music Man StingRay)
  • Play with fingers for warmth
  • DI into a preamp with subtle saturation
  • Compress moderately (3:1 ratio)

Option 2: Synthesized Bass

  • Subtractive synth with saw or square wave
  • Low-pass filter with slight envelope modulation
  • Sub-oscillator for low-end weight
  • Saturation for harmonics and warmth

Classic Bass Patterns

The Pushing Bass:

  • 1/8 notes, playing between the kicks
  • Creates a "pushing" feel that drives the groove

The Walking Bass:

  • Continuous 1/8 notes moving through chord tones
  • Adds sophistication and jazz influence

The Syncopated Funk:

  • Short, punchy notes on off-beats
  • Space between notes is as important as the notes themselves

Chords and Harmony

Chord Progressions

Deep house favors jazz and soul-influenced progressions:

Progression Mood Use Case
i – VII – VI – VII Dark, driving Classic deep house
ii – V – I Jazzy, sophisticated Bridges, instrumental sections
I – V – vi – IV Anthemic, emotional Vocal-driven tracks
i – VI – III – VII Emotional, uplifting Soulful deep house

Chord Voicings

  • Extended chords — 7ths, 9ths, 11ths for jazz sophistication
  • Voiced closely — Minimal space between chord tones for warmth
  • Rhodes and Wurlitzer — Electric pianos are essential
  • String pads — Layered strings for euphoric moments

Synth Sounds

Sound Use Characteristics
Electric piano Chords, riffs Warm, bell-like, slightly distorted
Warm pads Atmosphere, harmony Analog-style, low-pass filtered
Plucky keys Rhythmic melody Staccato, filtered, rhythmic
Brass stabs Energy, accent Sharp, punchy, rhythmic

Vocals in Deep House

Vocal Style

Deep house vocals are typically:

  • Soulful and expressive — R&B and gospel-influenced
  • Melodic and catchy — Strong hooks and memorable choruses
  • Often female vocals — Though male vocals work equally well
  • Chorus-heavy — Layered backing vocals for depth

Vocal Processing

  1. EQ — Cut lows below 100 Hz, boost 3–5 kHz for presence
  2. Compression — Medium compression (3:1–4:1)
  3. De-essing — Control sibilance
  4. Reverb — Long, lush hall reverb (3–5 seconds)
  5. Delay — 1/4 or 1/8 note delay, often ping-pong
  6. Chorus — Subtle chorus on backing vocals
  7. Doubling — Layered takes for thickness

Arrangement and Structure

Deep house follows classic house structures:

Section Bars Characteristics
Intro 8–16 Building atmosphere
Build 1 8–16 Bass and drums established
Drop/Chorus 1 16–32 Full arrangement, vocals enter
Breakdown 8–16 Stripped back, vocal focus
Build 2 8–16 Building tension
Drop/Chorus 2 16–32 Full arrangement
Outro 8–16 Stripping back, fade

Mixing Deep House

Low End

  • Kick and bass — Tight relationship, sidechain compression
  • Warmth over sub — Focus on 80–150 Hz for warmth
  • Mono sub — Keep sub centered

Mids

  • Vocal presence — Clear and upfront
  • Bass clarity — Defined and clear
  • Chord space — Pads and keys should be warm and full

Highs

  • Hi-hat sparkle — Bright but not harsh
  • Vocal air — 10+ kHz for breath and presence

Spatial Effects

  • Reverb — Long, lush halls and plates
  • Delay — 1/4 and 1/8 note delays
  • Stereo width — Wide pads and percussion

Loudness

  • Target: -10 to -8 LUFS — Club-ready but dynamic
  • Multiband compression — Gentle
  • Limiting — 2–4 dB of gain reduction

Essential Tools

Category Tools
DAW Ableton Live, Logic Pro, FL Studio
Bass Recorded bass guitar, or synths like Diva, Repro-5
Keys Keyscape, Lounge Lizard, Arturia V Collection
Synths Diva, Repro-5, Prophet V
Effects Soundtoys Decapitator, RC-20 Retro Color, Valhalla VintageVerb

Getting Started

  1. Set tempo to 122 BPM
  2. Program a four-on-the-floor kick — Warm, round, consistent
  3. Create a groovy bassline — Melodic, sidechained, pushing
  4. Add a clap on beat 2 and 4 — Layered, medium reverb
  5. Program hi-hats with swing — 1/8 notes, 10% swing
  6. Write a chord progression — Extended chords, jazz-influenced
  7. Add electric piano chords — Warm, bell-like
  8. Write a soulful vocal hook — Melodic, catchy, memorable
  9. Arrange with extended sections — Long instrumentals for dancefloor
  10. Mix warm and lush — Reverb, saturation, wide stereo image

Final Thoughts

Deep house is a genre of warmth, groove, and sophistication. It asks producers to think like musicians — crafting basslines that sing, chords that move, and arrangements that breathe. The best deep house tracks feel effortless, like they've always existed and always will.

Whether you're making classic Chicago-style deep house or modern melodic variations, the principles are the same: warm bass, groovy drums, lush chords, and an intimate atmosphere. The dancefloor will do the rest.

Frequently Asked Questions

What tempo range defines deep house?

Deep house runs at 120–125 BPM — slower than tech house (126–130) and Chicago house (125–128). The slightly reduced tempo creates more space between elements, allowing the chord voicings and basslines to breathe. Larry Heard's foundational tracks like "Can You Feel It" (1986) set this template at around 120 BPM.

Who are the founding figures of deep house?

Larry Heard (Mr. Fingers) is considered the father of deep house — his Roland TR-909/808 and Juno-106 productions from 1986–1989 defined the sound. Frankie Knuckles, Robert Owens, and Larry Heard's Fingers Inc. project at Chicago's Music Box club established the emotional, soulful quality that distinguishes deep house from harder Chicago house. Marshall Jefferson's "Move Your Body" (1986) is often cited as a touchstone.

What chord voicings are characteristic of deep house?

Deep house favors extended jazz chords — 7ths, 9ths, 11ths — voiced in mid-register with open spacing. The chords are typically played as sustained pads with slow attack and long release. A characteristic move is to voice the 7th in the bass register while stacking the upper extensions in the pad. Minor 7th and major 9th progressions are most common, often resolving via IV–I or ii–V movement.

How is the deep house kick different from tech house or minimal?

The deep house kick is round and warm — long sub decay, soft transient, minimal high-end click. It sits in the low-mids rather than punching through. Compare this to tech house kicks which are tighter and more percussive, or minimal kicks which are ultra-clean. Deep house kicks often come from the Roland TR-909 or its emulations (D16 Drumazon, Arturia DrumBrute Impact) and are frequently filtered to remove upper harmonics.

What role does the organ play in deep house?

The Rhodes electric piano and Gospel organ are central to deep house's soulful character. Chord stabs and pad swells on Rhodes samples (or NI The Gentleman, Modartt Pianoteq) provide melodic warmth. The organ — often a Hammond B3 emulation with Leslie rotary effect — appears in breakdown sections and adds the gospel-house spirituality associated with early Chicago club music.

How do deep house producers structure their arrangements?

Deep house arrangements are long — typical tracks run 7–9 minutes for DJ-friendly play. Structure: 4-bar intro (kick and hat only), 8-bar buildup (bass enters), main groove (32–64 bars), breakdown (chords/pads only, 16–32 bars), rebuild, main groove return, extended outro. Elements are introduced and removed gradually — full arrangements rarely play all elements simultaneously.

Which modern artists have redefined deep house?

Kerri Chandler kept the Chicago tradition alive through the 2000s and 2010s. Floating Points (UK) brought deep house into experimental and jazz territories. Jamie xx filtered it through indie sensibilities. John Talabot and Axel Boman defined a Scandinavian/Spanish deep house sound in the early 2010s. In modern production, BICEP's melodic approach expanded the genre's audience significantly.


Sources & Further Reading


Related Articles

Learning path

Continue with answer hubs