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dgxdx

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Posts posted by dgxdx

  1. re Yoozer: Thank you for your time to explain for each term in detail, also for the recommendation

    i'm sorry that i just know a little knowledge on remixing

    re: Zephyr

    thanks for your explanation too

    re: Nicole

    thanks for helping me to find out the demo, and the recommendation

    re: big giant

    so i can use Autotune to do the same voice effect as the song?

  2. I recently heard some songs which the vocal's voice edited with a effect like "phrase" or "delay" or "chorus". Such as a song from Sonic the hedgehog(PS3) called "02 DREAMS OF AN ABSOLUTION"....

    I just want to know is there any software can edit this kind of voice effect and do you guys have any recommeded vocal voice editing software? i used cool edit pro but it seems not enough to make the sound like studio recording

    Please help

  3. I've tried Virtual bassist and it's not very good, go for hypersonic 2 instead. Tons of great instruments!! Excellent for bass, drums, piano, organ, acoustic guitars, clean electric guitars, synths and string ensembles.

    actually i don't know how to use Virtual bassist in FLs.

    It didn't follow the notation i made.

    damn....not to mention the complicated cracking of the software

  4. i wonder which bass is the best for u guys, esp in FLs

    in FLs, i don't really know which bass is more like a bass guitar. even i used the generator called bass guitar, the sound seems to be far away from the real bass guitar, which is rough and noise.

    can somboday give me a suggestion of bass?

    your english is amazing.

    btw ghettoflame i think he just wants a bass guitar sound.

    http://www.kvraudio.com/get/1372.html

    the best bass guitar emulation i know of.

    haha, realpolitik, i can feel your "appreciation".

    by the way, how can i get it for free legally?

  5. DGXDX: I know you are using FL studio, so I'll tell you that you can get some nice rock drum sounds out of FPC, provided you get the effects right. Try putting some very light distortion on the snare, compressing the kick drum a lot, and makign sure the EQ setting on the cymbals - especially the ride - are right. Then make sure you have your velocity settings right, and you should get some nice rock sounds.

    NS_kit7 is very nice, though rather large. Just google it to find it.

    so, if i use this drum kit, i still have to add some effect to make it Rock?

    also, how can i separate the snare, kick drum etc. with different extent of effects in NS_kit7? is it input 2 times of NS_kit7 and each NS_kit7 is responsible snare and kick drum respectively?

  6. which soundfont or other sound file of drumkit likes a Rock Band style?

    i mean, when u r listening Green Day, the drum sounds, especailly the snare that i want to make.

    i 've tried other drumkit file, no one likes that band sound

    Try this one:http://www.sf2midi.com/index.php?page=sdet&id=7951, it's the best acoustic drum-soundfont I've heard.

    atfer i input the sf2 file, why i can't hear any sound even i click on the virtual keyboard in FLs?

  7. Yes, thats the pitch controller. You need to play around with the pitch event editor, make it go "up and down" until you get the speed right.

    Sorry if that was too vague, I have a tendency to do that without realizing it.

    um, if i want to specify 1 instrument's sound goes "up and down" how to do it? i just made all stuff 's sound go up and down together only

    Just for future reference, when the pitch goes "up and down", its called vibrato. You might want to brush up on some musical terms to communicate a little clearer.

    No problem, though.

    yea, that's exactly wt i mean, got a new term, thnak you

  8. It's still in the tutorial section.

    And really now. We do like to help, but this question "How do I remix" comes up every other day. We have a huge collection of info on this page, whynot usethe search function, start with the basics, etc. I mean... we don't have sticky topics for nothing.

    And yeah, a similar thread that is only 2(!) days old!

    http://www.ocremix.org/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=83871

    You see the problem here? You're an individual, yeah. But that doesn't mean that you can be lazy and start a new thread asking for spoonfeeding where other threads already answer your problems.

    that's fine. i will stop posting newbie' posts

  9. the budget of the hardware is around US$750~1250, but i wonder which kind of the hardware is commonly used in remixing.

    A Remix is not a genre; otherwise everything on the site would sound the same. There's nothing common; all depends on the available budget (usually not that high due to the age groups on this site) and the available space (most people don't have a full studio for themselves). So, compact, inexpensive gear (but this is not the rule).

    btw, how do u make the music? make a midi first?

    I start up Cubase and play something. It records what I play. I can also start up Reason and do the same. Eventually, the song format can not be really called "MIDI" anymore; MIDI has a number of restrictions. Cubase allows an audio track, for instance; so if I need background noise, I can just drag a complete waveform in the sequencer on a single track.

    I can also bounce what I played to an audio track; since playing audio is less CPU-intensive than calculating how a plugin sounds, I can use more instruments.

    There's no recipe. First you figure out how you want to remix an existing track, what instruments you're going to need. Then you start building the basis or maybe focus on the chorus/verse structure to make those complete (e.g. completely compose and play in all the tracks) first.

    I have a number of hardware synthesizers that are controlled by a remote keyboard. The remote sends MIDI signals to the MIDI-interface which routes 'm through to the actual device. This allows me to sit on my ass and choose what synth I want to play from a single location.

    so do u have any suggestion of the model of hardware?

    i just know the Roland 's sythesizers. Should i buy the compact 1 with keyboard or sound module and a keyboard? As i don't want to waste my money on buying unsuitable units for remixing

  10. What ever happenned to the beginners guide to hardware/software? It seems to have dissappeared.

    i remembered i 've read the passage about how to remix by Mcvaffe. He suggested some hardwares and methods to do so, but i don't really remember wt the name of the hardware is. sth likes Roland's product.

    The post seems to be deleted. It was a sticky post in past

  11. i want to know how many methods can use to remix music...

    Pray tell, how'd you miss that dozen of stickied threads put there for your convenience? If you would have the same prowess in traffic, you'd turn Route 66 in a desolate, wreck-laden wasteland ;).

    1. Use midi and output it with synthezier

    MIDI is not audio. Your synthesizer will only tell the receiving party what notes it should play, not how they sound. MIDI is to audio what musical scoresheets are to tape. The difference is crucial.

    2. use real instrument to record

    Do you play a real instrument or do you have the patience to learn it? If not, then a purely computer-based approach is one of the cheapest and fastest ways to make songs.

    3. input and edit different wav, gathering them into music
    Samples alone are usually not enough.
    it there any other methods?
    Yes. Software synthesizers, for instance.
    for 1, wt hardware should i buy to export a high quality of sound?
    None. This question is meaningless. It can't be answered without an actual budget.

    Furthermore, in terms of synthesizers you may forget any terms you've learned from computers - synthesizers (except a few which you can count on 2 hands and which have a 4-digit price) aren't there with the uploading/downloading/exporting stuff yet.

    p.s I'm a beginner of remixer

    Read the stickies and this http://www.tweakheadz.com/

    Come back when you can answer the above question of budget and after you've read more of the material. Having people shout various brand names or plugins at you isn't going to do you any good; you must understand the underlying concepts better in order to refine your choices.

    Sure, you can download the FL Studio trial version. This will however cause a load of questions in its own right; a lot of which can be answered by some reading.

    the budget of the hardware is around US$750~1250, but i wonder which kind of the hardware is commonly used in remixing.

    btw, how do u make the music? make a midi first?

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