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Sound Design / Re: How Do I Make This Stab?
« on: November 22, 2016, 11:05:51 pm »
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well you have to get the basics right, so work with construction kits for starters,
you have to train your ears over time and some samples work better than others
over time, collect your own personal samples and build your own sample library
your own kicks, claps, rides etc
you should check out dave parkinson's trance essentials because the youtube clips you posted were uplifting trance, dave parkinson works with simon patterson
Well, in the first track the FX just sounds like high passed white noise - you can either use a synth or a sample of white noise, then high pass it and either sweep a low pass filter down or fade the volume out and voila.
For the vocal samples, they probably used a microphone and recorded it themselves.
Regarding sampling, we at The Producer's Forum don't condone using copyrighted material without express written permission of the copyright holder BUT I can say that Audio Hijack is my go-to for capturing audio from my computer that might not be easily downloadable.
A lot of these FX can be made by just high pass filtering or low pass filtering some sort of noise (or maybe something like a triangle/distorted sine wave if it sounds tonal) with an LFO on the cutoff. You can use LFOtool, you can use the filter's built-in LFO if it has it, you can draw it in manually... there are a thousand ways to get to the answer you're looking for. If you don't want to design it yourself, sign up for Splice and do a lot of digging!
Well, has it helped you? Just be honest on it
An octave would be way too much.
It's hard to hear, but maybe the sample is just two tones, then you don't need the pitching. I guess it's a very simple pingpong delay with lots of reverb.
I'm not familiar with H-delay.
Isn't this just a regular pingpong delay?
I like this delay because you have independent control over left and right channel:
http://www.hornetplugins.com/plugins/hornet-deelay/
I think this delay and a fair amount of reverb could create the effect.
I don't think I hear a reverse effect but there is a lot of reverb on the delay.
EDIT: Maybe this is done by two seperate delay units and one of them is pitched a bit higher.