
I sampled lots of flexor modulars, prodessey, pro-one, dub sub, ... You can hear some of those!
All sample based this one.
Cheers,
Harmany
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Well the goal is having a huge sample lib which I fly thru when creating tracks! I duplicate tracks and assign differnt samples etc. etc. This way of producing works for me! And with a small amount of work I have lots of samples to nice up my tracks! And dont forget you can create huge effect chains when sampling, since I dont need DSP for other things when doing that.erminardi wrote:Just a question: why you sample (a lot) your Scope synths if U have the originals???
I can understand if some times U need to fix some i.e. drums or basslines, but what is the goal for sampling almost all?
Portability? DSP usage?
In a lot of synth sounds, with sampling, U can loose the filter/amp/lfo dynamic.
Just curious about yor huge sampling project...
Ok thanks for the advice! I will try to see if I get any resultshubird wrote:Nice track indeed
About the mix, I think there's too much bad choosen reverberation going on.
At least you should differentiate the reverbs more smart.
Everything but the drums sounds rather flat now, and there's no connection between the drums and the rest, mixwise.
You can get much more depth in the mix if you try to locate at least three different depth-layers in the mix, one for the dry drums (yet try a real 'ambient' reverb on it, early reflexions mainly which you only detect if you turn it off), a second one with a moderate room, and a third one with big but clean hall to show off.
A good trick also is to first try to get room enough with three different delays, and then add the reverbs to your taste.
You'll get a much more cleaner mix, together with much more effective space experience.
Yet a possible negative side effect of using just 'static' samples, your use of reverb?...