Jump to content

Garpocalypse

Members
  • Posts

    2,187
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    18

Posts posted by Garpocalypse

  1. 7 minutes ago, Mr. Bottle Rocket said:

    quiplash is better than freedom planet. 8)

    hey hey hey now.  Over the line.

    I was just saying that Freedom Planet was a better game than Undertale.  Not that Undertale was a worse game than Freedom Planet.  It's completely different! Your comparison, sir, makes a mockery of what Galaxy Trail accomplished when they released Freedom Planet.

    Which is found here: http://galaxytrail.com/freedomplanetsite/

    ..and here: http://store.steampowered.com/app/248310/

     

     

     

     

  2. Oh man, what's with all the philisophicles talkin' in this thread?!

    No I am not making a comparison between between the two games.  That would be like making a comparison between between Freedom Planet and a dead stick. Sure the stick was fun for kids a long time ago, but our species has moved on since then.

    I'm just saying Freedom Planet Is a better game than Undertale In the same way Die Hard is a better movie than Forest Gump. Yea one was an instant academy award winner that was a poignant statement on a simple, well-meaning guy trapped between multiple social conflicts in the most turbulent times in this country..but Die Hard wasn't 2+ hours of extreme boredom. ...and it had shooting and explosions and stuff in it.  Die Hard was considerably less boring. In fact, Die Hard was awesome.  

    die-hard-o.gif

    I rest my case. I win.  FLAWLESS ANALOGY.

     

     

  3. Now you're getting it!  Just remember that in order to have a counter argument you MUST buy Freedom Planet and play through it a few times! Then you might be able to convince me if i'm wrong. Just FYI, there's no arguing with crazy people...!  Which is why it's crazy if you don't play this game!

    And just so everyone knows I am in no way attacking Undertale.  I'm just pointing out what a great game Freedom Planet is and at the same time pointing out all the flaws that are inherent in Undertale that make it not nearly the great game Freedom Planet is.

    3 hours ago, Bleck said:

    saying Freedom Planet is better than Undertale is wrong by virtue of Undertale being a good game and Freedom Planet being a bad one

     Bleck, that's not a virtue!

     

  4. Just starting to hear that it was terminal brain cancer that went undiagnosed until a few days before his death. :(

    Growing up Lemmy was one of my favorite bassists right next to Geddy Lee and Cliff Burton.  His love of Rickenbacker's 4001 and 4003 series was what made me want to get one back when i was in highschool.  Haven't been this bummed out about a musician passing in awhile but considering the difficulties he had with the last tour he did it's really not that surprising. 

    RIP. 

  5. Just to echo what Brandon said, yes there are so many factors that go into guitar tone that it's become a signature of sorts for individual guitarists.  which is why it can be so difficult to work with them and get them to understand that their guitar tone that they spent time and money perfecting NEEDS to be cut in a way that agrees with the rest of the mix.  Strings, String Tunings, Pick Gauges, Pickups, Mic Placement, Mic Type, Mic MANUFACTURER, and the guitarists picking technique all go into the resulting tone.

    However, I was talking about post processing choices AFTER all of that was already decided. In many cases these choices have influences ENTIRE sub-genres of rock and metal and given that most metal-heads develop a sickeningly psychotic devotion to their favorite sound to suggest something outside of what they know they like could be grounds for starting a war.  :)Generally,  i find saturation to work better than directly compressing the resulting tone however as i've stated before i LOOOOOOOOOOOOVE high gain.  The higher the gain the better.  For a crunchier rhythm guitar i'm guessing that it may be a toss up as i would never use a saturator over a compressor for acoustic guitars.  

    1 hour ago, Brandon Strader said:

     

    When I was saying I wanted to use a limiter on my heavy rhythms, I was talking about half-stack mic'd with an SM57 aimed near the center cup about an inch, maybe 2 inches away,

     

       ONE SM57? If you're not using fredman mic'ing techniques you're doing it wrong. :P 

    https://www.gearslutz.com/board/so-much-gear-so-little-time/432276-anybody-into-clayman-miking.html

  6. 5 minutes ago, timaeus222 said:

    If I do use it, it would be to keep the peaks controlled (yet not overcompressed). But if I feel like I have to use a limiter to solve any problems with guitar processing, I probably would go back to the amp sim (pre-limiter) and check the internal EQ there. If your frequency distribution is pretty even, then the waveform should look fairly even as well.

    I know i'mma saturation nut but with the way i'm thinking about it this could be accomplished in a much less abrasive way with saturation.  A plugin like this gives you control over the saturation of upper vs lower freqs http://www.kvraudio.com/product/x_cita_by_elogoxa/details I use it quite often.  

    I'm going to experiment myself with this but for some reason i'm completely averted to using compressors/limiters on high-gain guitars rhythm guitars. I've been around some indie-mixers in the past who swore by it and found that I couldn't listen to the mix for more than a few minutes without extreme ear fatigue even at low volumes.  

     

     

  7. 3 hours ago, Brandon Strader said:

     

    How have the rest of you guys been updating and adjusting your mastering chains? What new discoveries have you made with EQing? After all this time I'm a little surprised at how I EQd those acoustic guitars, some things I've forgotten or lost along the way. High passing was probably a great idea, but I have not done that on acoustic guitars last year. I probably should. Body is good to have, and some low end, but not at the risk of having too much. You've always got the bass guitar to fill in the low frequencies anyway.

     

    I know i'm not as experienced as you guys are but my mastering chain is just a Multiband compressor used to give a slight pump to the lower and upper mids, a console saturator, and a booster/limiter  (Boost11 it's called). I try to avoid EQ's on the master but if I have one it's usually a slight low shelf at -2db or something slight like that to balance out some of the lows.  Blending Reverb and delay is taken care of via sends on the faders in almost all of the stuff i've done lately.  

     

    3 hours ago, Brandon Strader said:

     

    Also just to add, I want to experiment with using a limiter on heavy guitars. I know it is frowned upon at OCR to overcompress your guitar tracks, especially rhythms, but in the professional metal field using a limiter on rhythms is 1 of the single most common things. I know for a fact, from having talked to Vladimir from Mirrorthrone, that he uses a compressor on his rhythms or at least he did during the recording of Gangrene album which was also years ago. But I see the value in limiting more than compressing to get that nice guitar brick rather than a sausage

    I find that my metal processing considerations tend to change every few months but one thing i am pretty happy with is the sound of my rhythm guitars.  99% of metal rhythm guitars sound horrible imo and I don't see the point of a limiter on the rhythms especially if you are talking high-gain. Of course I follow power metal, which maintains a more aurally pleasing rhythm guitar distortion, much closer than metalcore/nu-metal/industrial where compressing guitars an insane amount is common.  Since most metal mixing uses the rhythm guitars as the base of the mix in the first place, what exactly would you be accomplishing with a limiter?

    A much better idea methinks would be to put a multiband on the guitarbus or post amp-sim to give it a slight pump in the upper and lower mids.  This makes the rhythm guitar a bit more subtly dynamic.  

     

  8. 1 hour ago, Brandon Strader said:

    I liked the light saber duels in the prequels, especially the big final one in Episode 3, the choreography was amazing. It wasn't sped up and they just practiced it for months to get it down that well. Really impressive stuff.

     

    Even though I'll agree that what they did for the fighting choreography fit the mood of the movie and emotion of the scenes perfectly, being a huge kung fu movie fan I would have liked to see some more interesting light saber combat too.  The only beef I have with it is that it takes people years to learn to move correctly when doing a fight scene like that and the prequels had so many inconsistencies between the actors and the people who knew what they were doing.  Not to say this movie didn't have it's moments like that, that fight scene between Finn and the Storm Trooper with the single giant shock tonfa near the end sort of details what i'm talking about.  Finn went that entire scene barely looking like he knew what he was doing.  I mean there were a few moments where he took way too long to prep for the next step and the storm trooper was pretty much looking at him like "hey c'mon hit me already! I don't want to stand here forever!"

    ...and you know what?  With Finn being a former storm trooper fighting with a lightsaber, it worked perfectly!  

     

  9. 8 hours ago, Light_of_Aether said:

    I really enjoyed your song!

    I'm in the same boat as you with EWQLSO Gold; I'd love to have the close and hall mics available for more sound.

    Thanks!

    Actually, Chimpazilla was awesome enough to run some close mic samples off for the Field Funeral Tenor drum line that plays 5 minutes in. As soon as I put those stems in the drum line went from almost unusable to just what was needed. Once I saw how the close mics and the stage mics fit together I now can't wait to get all of the mic positions just to see how all of the samples sound when of the different mic positions are blended together. 

  10. Just got out of the movie and i'm still floored by what I saw.  I'll admit I wasn't as excited for episode VII like so many were but seeing it has completely reawakened my love of the star wars universe. 

    I was amazed at the pacing of the movie.  Nothing felt too drawn out or overly concise and the segues were all classic star wars without the feeling of suddenly dropping the viewer that episode I-III had a huge problem with imo.  

    I'll gush more tomorrow but it was definitely everything it needed to be.

  11. Hey everyone,

    In a never ending obsession with trying to achieve the largest wall of sound possible I did this track for the holidays this year.  After noticing a rather severe lack of Upper mids and highs on the album version I decided to try to push this version's strings and brass a bit higher.  However with it being EWQLSO Gold (and only having stage mics available) I was only able to get the samples brightened so far before becoming abrasive.  Definitely going to be saving up for EWQLSO Platinum.

    It consists of 3 variations on Sonic 3's Icecap Zone Act 1  Sonic Advance's Ice Mountain a secret source, We 3 Kings and I saw 3 Ships.  Here's a hint. The secret source occurs in the middle.

     

    Enjoy!

  12. On 12/23/2015 at 10:10 AM, Rexy said:

    These two little figures (not the coffee cup which was bought at a past London Gaming Con) came through the mail today, and they look so adorable!  And I was worried that with the lead up to the holiday, the OCR SS would be another delayed asset on top of everything else that had happened in the run-up to this event.

    Still, I am thankful they both came!  Once I do some winter cleaning they'll have a nice, chilled home in my room.

    I had a look at the gift notes from the package and it also said something about download codes for some of their music.  If they're anywhere, they weren't in the box; wonder if they ended up somewhere that I hadn't looked yet.

    Considering what the SS set out to do, I have a feeling there may be more that had gone under my radar, but we'll see. Nevertheless, thanks so much Garpocalypse! :D

    image.jpg

     

    Glad these made it in time for christmas.  I was given a date after the delay of Dec 30 and they made it a week before!  For the record though I was REALLY trying to get you some of the other things on your list but everything I took to checkout wouldn't support international shipping.  Hope you enjoy them!

    The download codes don't exist yet, that's part 3 of the episodic christmas.  I have some music i'm licensing and when the process is all completed i'll be sending you some codes for them.  

  13. I think my track is about to kill me.  Seriously.  if I go missing before the deadline, my track did it.  

    Since this is the third time i'll be on this album I decided to go with the style I originally wanted to become OCR-famous for. Only, I think I went too far with it.  Originally it was going to be just a Sonic related theme of some sort mixed with We Three Kings but I ended up going a smidge further.  Some last minute arrangement changes had to be made but it will be in by sunday afternoon.  

     

  14. Just a heads up to my recipient, (who has no idea who they are) and the state of Garpocalypse's Episodic Christmas Surprise.   Just received an update on what I had ordered from Amazon.  It won't be making it there in time for Christmas but it will be there before new years.   The seller ran out of stock and delayed my shipment by a week. I guess my order went through before they were able to put the notification up.  :/

     

     

  15. 33 minutes ago, Sir_NutS said:

    Pretty good general advice on how to do it on your DAW, but you forgot to mention that you can't just find the tonic and move the old tonic to the new one if you're switching between minor and major scales or viceversa.  I do agree, the best way to find your scale is just to play the keyboard (or your instrument of choice)  alongside the song.  Singing works too if you can hit the notes.

    You can try to figure out the key just by listening, as Darkesword suggests, but for some people (like me) that's much harder.  I've been doing music for years and I still can't discern with 100% certainty one scale from another just by listening.  Once I start playing things become clearer though.

    I was only addressing what would be the simplest transposition issue.  Books have been written on covering all aspects of transposing and I didn't want to get too far into it out of fear of de-railing Mindwanderer's thread and the subsequent Darkesword'ing that was sure to follow. :)

    I feel that as you discuss the various aspects transposing it would be logical to start with getting the tonic right.  Then Major/Minor, then use of the appropriate modes.  But really, from there it's not far from also discussing figured bass exercises, key modulations through secondary dominants or secondary subdominants, extended 9th 11th and 13th chords and so on until hundreds of years of the development of western music theory has been covered. Seeing as how the person asking how to transpose is having some issues with understanding how to bring a source to a chosen home key I didn't think it was necessary to cover more than that.  

    Are you saying you can't determine the key of a scale just by listening? That would require having perfect pitch to get it 100% right.  Otherwise it's just a matter of taking a known pitch and working out the various intervals (knowing what a major 2nd, minor 3rd, Perfect 4 and 5th and so on) sound like then arriving at the resulting pitch that way.  The various modes, foreign scales, pentatonics, blues scales and what have you all have fairly distinct sounds for the most part. 

     

     

     

     

  16. 13 hours ago, Brandon Strader said:

     

    1 hour ago, Neblix said:

    He's truthing. No one's obviously so multi talented and all around a great guy with such worldly interests. :P

    2 hours ago, Native Jovian said:

    At this point I'm genuinely unsure of whether you're trolling or truthing.

    But it amuses me either way. But not in the way that you might expect. or anyone else for that matter.

     

    Truthing.  Truthing hard.  

    2 hours ago, Garpocalypse said:

     Logic people. you gotta see the entire picture here or your arguments aren't going to pan out for you. and just so everyone realizes,  YES this is a HUGE issue. Wars killing thousands and thousands of people have been fought for MUCH more ridiculous reasons than this. Don't believe me? look it up. 

    http://www.history.com/news/history-lists/6-wars-fought-for-ridiculous-reasons

     

    ...and getting carried away about a fictitious line that was drawn for no reason.

    Maybe.  

     

×
×
  • Create New...