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Everything posted by bitflipper
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C'mon, that's really a ventilation shaft for your underground bunker, right?
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CW makes no distinction between a sampler and any other type of software instrument, so the problem isn't that it's a sampler per se. Usually, when a plugin isn't detected it's because the DLL was installed into a folder that the VST scanner wasn't told to look in. Figure out where it resides on disk, then add that path to the scanner's list of places to look, as detailed in scook's link above. That should solve your problem.
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The album only exists on vinyl. We've talked about digitizing and remastering it, but don't have the original masters. Plus the tapes wouldn't do me any good anyway without a deck capable of playing 1/2" 8-track tape. However, I think I may still have a never-played copy of it in a closet somewhere, still in the shrinkwrap. We could probably pull a decent copy from it - if I had access to a really good turntable. Which I don't. And yes, RBH, IIRC it was a CP-70 that belonged to the studio. They laughed when I brought in my Roland EP-30 and said here, try this instead.
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Since I'm stranded on a island in the Philippines
bitflipper replied to Øyvind Skald's topic in The Coffee House
Thanks for that. Dang, the Philippines' daily cases are as high as, um, Florida. That's bad. I actually expected it to be even worse due to the population density of urban areas. However, much of the archipelago is rural, farming country where one would hope transmission would be slower. That's turning out not to be holding true in rural America, either. The good news is that Filipinos can retreat to the bundoks - as many did during WWII - where the transmission rate is much, much lower. Unfortunately, the Cordilleras are a long way from Øyvind's neighborhood. -
I went into the studio on May 18th 1980 to support my friend's first album. I haven't heard this since 1980. I played piano and the faux-flute (on a MicroMoog), and arranged the backing vocals. My pay for that session was a TEAC 3340-S. BTW, that's my old Rickenbacker in the photo. I had just sold it to Lee for $400. He turned around and sold it the following week for $1200. What a dick. But still my best friend after all these years.
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Since I'm stranded on a island in the Philippines
bitflipper replied to Øyvind Skald's topic in The Coffee House
And to what degree has the virus impacted your island? Or rural areas in general? I worry about my family there, even though they're on a remote island. As you note, they are an intrinsically social people not inclined to self-isolate. -
My state's been voting exclusively by mail for more than 10 years. Works pretty well, but it does encourage cheating - I always look up the answers.
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Since I'm stranded on a island in the Philippines
bitflipper replied to Øyvind Skald's topic in The Coffee House
There are far worse places to be stranded. At least you can't starve there. Or freeze, which may hold more meaning for a Viking. I was recently watching ABS-CBN and they were showing footage of Manila streets. Talk about surreal - it was like the opening scene of 28 Days After. No traffic. You can't comprehend how strange that is unless you've experienced the hell that is Manila traffic. BTW, some cheap but quite decent acoustic guitars are made in the Philippines. Ask around. -
I had to go back and re-read that review to see if Imperial Delay had indeed been over-praised. To quote the article itself: "Maybe". But here's a genuine testimonial: this is the only product I've ever gone out and purchased after having been given an NFR for it.
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I have loved Eventide hardware since the 80's, even though it was out of my price range back then. Today I would have every Eventide software product, if not for my no-iLok policy. If anyone else is similarly put off by the iLok requirement, tritik's new Irid isn't as pretty but has a nearly identical feature set and (to my ears) a very similar sound.
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"All DAW's sound alike" and other wisdom of the Internet
bitflipper replied to Starship Krupa's topic in The Coffee House
I'm holding out for a meteorite. Won't see it coming and it'll be over before I know what hit me. BTW, "peacefully in his sleep" usually means the fellow died from a morphine overdose. True fact. -
Why are my two MIDI tracks not syncing with each other?
bitflipper replied to Clare Sudbery's topic in Cakewalk by BandLab
If both tracks start exactly at 00:00, move them to the right by one measure. -
Don't dodge the question, CJ - who are you, really? Your initials are the same as another well-known poster, who used to go by the alias "CJ". Coincidence?
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"All DAW's sound alike" and other wisdom of the Internet
bitflipper replied to Starship Krupa's topic in The Coffee House
My mixes suck and I can't sing. So which do I need: a new DAW, a new interface, or more RAM? -
My go-to for quick 'n dirty background vocals is Omnisphere, but that's an expensive route. The Ladies from Realivox is quite good and a lot of fun to experiment with, and although it takes significantly more effort it's the way to go when you want your faux-vocalists to actually say something besides "ooh". A FREE Kontakt library that I use often is actually a demo for a singers-for-hire service called SoundBetter.
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Yup, anything he creates goes straight into my toolbox without question. "Ethereal" and "mystical" do not describe my style at all. Still, these fit into even the most conventional genres, as thickeners, transitions, stingers and percussive effects.
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Transpose a vocal track down to thicken?
bitflipper replied to mark skinner's topic in Cakewalk by BandLab
I've never transposed a recorded vocal to make it sound deeper, mainly due to the possibility of noticeable quality loss. It's the same reason I only pitch-correct the worst-offending words and leave the rest alone even if it's not "perfect". However, picking the right key for a vocalist is crucial, not just for ease of singing but also for tonal quality. Elvis Presley famously sang out of his natural range on purpose. Initially it was because he learned songs from demo recordings made by a guy with a higher voice, but it became apparent that those strained high notes added emotional content that appealed to consumers. Personally, I like to sing below my natural comfort zone because it doesn't sound like me anymore. But only for recording, where I can get away with it; on stage I'm far more likely to pick keys that test the upper end of my range. Two of the most widely used techniques for vocal thickening, as noted above, are double-tracking and micro-shifting. But both need to be done with care lest they sound obviously artificial. Don't forget less-intrusive effects such as EQ, delays and distortion. These can significantly fatten a vocal without it sounding obviously manipulated. -
There is no need to globally exclude audio files because they'll only be re-indexed after being edited or updated. You probably aren't going to be editing the audio that plays when you get an error message or an email, or the sound files from video games. I exclude my entire project drive, plus my sample libraries drive for good measure. Granted, I may be waiting a few milliseconds seconds longer for a Kontakt library to load as a result, but I can live with that.
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He doesn't really need a separate interface, as the Mackie is also an audio interface over USB. The lack of pan knobs is troubling, but it appears they've dealt with that in a more compact way, with a single switch that separates channels 1 and 2 into L and R. I'm just guessing, but it looks like that button labeled "Stereo Pan" needs to be depressed.
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Wow. 80 vocalists singing "aaaow" in unison. Pretty clever arrangement. Here's another one. Disco version of "Another Brick in the Wall".
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That does sound like the kind of generic name Behringer would use. Maybe somebody here who is a Behringer user could tell us what the driver shows up as. IIRC, and that's a big "I", Behringer either initially didn't have ASIO drivers for their products, or did have but dropped them. Entirely possible that's just my old brain mis-remembering, I dunno.
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^^^ Yup. Much bigger deal than file indexing. An even bigger boogeyman is your network interface. Might want to consider shutting that service off if you're having any performance issues. When I was struggling with a potato computer, I wrote a batch file to disable the network before starting up SONAR. Windows just assumes that nothing you could possibly be doing on your computer is more important than getting Microsoft notifications in a timely manner.
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As long as you're excluding your audio data, indexing should not have any noticeable impact on performance.
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Interesting. I use Trilian and always end up freezing it (it can be such a hog), but have never seen this behavior. I am not in the habit of rewinding or doing any other preparation before freezing. Do you guys also use Omnisphere, and if so, does it behave this way as well? My understanding is that both instruments are basically the same under the hood, as evidenced by each being able to play the other's samples. The reason I ask is I'm wondering if the issue is actually within the instrument or if the problem lies elsewhere. It just doesn't make sense that an instrument could cause this behavior on its own.