mashing up amens with renoise (simple)

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Postby Funkicker » Tue Jan 06, 2009 7:19 pm

no need for me to relearn slicing, but im seriously digging your tunes on your myspace, big up

could you maybe hint how you have so much control over your basses?
i seem to have a method which takes entirely too much time (pre- making and compressing every kind of extreme filter movement, and adding another filter to top it)

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Postby nameless » Thu Jan 22, 2009 1:55 pm

em reason?

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Postby nsound » Thu Jan 22, 2009 9:58 pm

^funkicker - i generally use a synth (massive usually) with a simple sine/square tuned down low and then use camel crusher on the 'british clean' preset to add some volume and presence.

i'll usually write a couple of simple riffs and then resample them in renoise so i can use the pattern effects - such as the pitch slide up and down to process it more.

sometimes it worksd better than others tho!

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Postby Funkicker » Fri Jan 23, 2009 5:25 pm

oh hehe thats exactly the same i do it.. but i mainly use the lfo meta device and filters,
and i usually choose albino, i only use massive for the heavy reeces
ah well, i just think it's a pretty slow method and was hoping you knew a quicker one :P thx though

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Postby another » Sat Jan 24, 2009 10:34 pm

THANKS!

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Postby youngrobigan » Sat Jan 31, 2009 12:22 am

amazing cheers

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Postby qwertyasdabc » Sat Feb 07, 2009 2:06 pm

this is great!

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Postby atom heart » Sun Feb 15, 2009 2:31 am

is there a way to do such offsets in cubase?


(noob)

ty

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Postby nsound » Sun Feb 15, 2009 11:03 am

you could do it in cubase - it just takes a lot longer as it's a totally different interface/philosophy behind the manipulation of the audio-

you'd need to slice your audio into individual hits and then bounce each one down and apply proccessing, slice up further, repeat, reverse, go into automation lanes and change the panning and volume curves... etc

ive never really tried to do this in a traditional sequencer as it just seems like a massive ball ache - like i say it only takes seconds in renoise.

you can always just download dbglitch - which incidentally was made by a renoise user who built the plug in to emulate tracker style effects..

http://illformed.org/plugins/glitch/

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Postby atom heart » Sun Feb 15, 2009 11:27 am

ty for the reply!
so I have to learn something again...

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cool

Postby psymonok » Tue Feb 17, 2009 4:15 pm

great stuf

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Postby kukis » Sat Feb 21, 2009 7:14 pm

cool

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Postby kloakatriposa » Tue Mar 24, 2009 11:41 am

Great tutorial, works fine with 1.9

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Postby shotintoeternity » Wed Apr 08, 2009 1:11 pm

This tutorial is a godsend. Thanks!

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Postby voltefacecon » Sat May 02, 2009 1:21 am

sweet, thanks. 8)

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