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Posts
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Last visited
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Profile Information
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Occupation
classified
Artist Settings
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Collaboration Status
3. Very Interested
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Software - Digital Audio Workstation (DAW)
Reaper
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Composition & Production Skills
Arrangement & Orchestration
Drum Programming
Mixing & Mastering
Recording Facilities
Synthesis & Sound Design -
Instrumental & Vocal Skills (List)
Electric Guitar: Lead
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Aster's Achievements
Newbie (1/14)
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Skrypnyk reacted to a post in a topic: [Recruiting] SONG MAKERS / REMIXERS
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Cole Train reacted to a post in a topic: [Recruiting] SONG MAKERS / REMIXERS
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Bowlerhat reacted to a post in a topic: [Recruiting] SONG MAKERS / REMIXERS
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Alarm bells are sounding in my head. You're looking to be a middleman where other people provide effort and content and surrender all creative licensing to you under the premise that you would forward youtube advertising revenue to the song creator in the future. This could be enticing if you had a channel that already has a massive following because if you don't then we could just post content to our own youtube channels and the search algorithms would return the same viewing numbers but we retain control. To give up your own creative licensing is a massive loss of control, It actually is something I do but I am remunerated through large session fees per day if I record for an artist. Some incentivization would definitely be needed because we're all capable here of doing anything you could provide at a technical level.
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This one is for a vocaloid collab where the singer is looking for a visual novel theme. Made with Reaper
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Aster started following Current OCR Projects Situation: Analysis and Solutions , Instrumental Lounge Jazz Song - DLT , Mid Guitar Input Devices and 1 other
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Make a midi file of a piece of music. This is a request, if you can do that then PM me and I'll provide as much help as you need. There is a musical trap where the fun of learning how others create gives you the satisfaction as if you had made music and demotivates you from actually doing anything. If you need to be led then I recommend cloning music, find a song and try and replicated it as perfectly as you can and in doing so you will learn the practical skills of that musician.
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I would humbly disagree, each instrument has their own advantages and disadvantages mechanically and if you have a massive skill gap between one or the other then it's best to use which one you excel at. I made this thread to show lesser experienced people that there's options to help assist them make music and to perhaps discuss specific hardware for anyone looking for advice since I've been using these tools for a while. For someone who has no piano experience the ability to transfer already learned skills into a practical application immediately is something wonderful. Nobody seems to be discussing this on the internet and my students have benefited from these technologies. I'm sensing some elitism with the word choices and whether it is intended or not it's there, a keyboard or synth isn't a "phony piano" and it also isn't "only good to play virtual piano". Kontakt works fine with a midi guitar and for a regular guitarist it's very easy to input chord progressions, arpeggio and melody work within minutes of picking up an input guitar and start making music. We too can record at slower speeds and use mod wheels with midi selection hardware, I would say that the YRG arm is a superior mod wheel since the physical movement range is greater with more control. It's just not that nice to look down on other musicians because they use tools that aren't your own preferences or say they aren't capable to do certain things. The way I see it is that we speak the same language, music. In Japanese there's elitists who make fun of others for writing in roman characters rather than writing in symbolic kanji even though the words are the same. If anyone is looking for advice on DAW setup, hardware, input workarounds feel free to post or PM me. Neblix may only be able to use a synthar for virtual guitar but that's his limitation and not ours, don't be intimidated. I can supply you with books on 8 finger guitar playing technique as well so you can do full piano stuff on the synthar.
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There's a way of recording music for us guitarists without touching the keyboard if you're not aware and I would like to bring focus to this issue! There's great options for guitarists a range of prices so I'll detail some of them as it may help you out. and I've used them all The cheapest option is a rockband 3 fender mustang pro controller for the wii. Any platform is the same thing for midi input but since this is old hardware the wii is cheapest usually. Note intensity can be controlled though picking but it feels like 3-4 different volumes at maximum on the trigger and if you are trying to record full speed guitar lead parts then the upstroke double triggers. Maybe the designer doesn't play guitar and thinks down bias should be a better mechanism but it's barebones and works. The neck buttons are clearly defined, cheap and squeaky and frets are limited to 17. The mid level options are the YourRock guitar 2 and their higher end lineage. The YRG2 has a better string trigger than RBP and it's very easy to do lead synth parts on it, the neck is buttons under fake strings. It feels more comfortable than the RBP3 and easier to trigger for faster parts, a lower action feeling. I prefer the neck of the RBP3 as buttons have a defined feedback and trick my brain better. I have not played the lineage but there's a video on it here: My own daily driver is a Starr Labs Ztar Starr Labs make guitars with the RBP3 button style neck and the pressure strings type YRG neck but have better right hand triggers and no squeaky buttons. They cost a fortune though. I learned piano when I was younger but don't use any for midi input as I can think the music on guitar much easier. If I had to choose one to get today again I'd probably go for the lineage YRG. Anyone else here use a device like this?
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Aster reacted to a post in a topic: Anyway, Here's Wonderwall | A Wonderwall Tribute Album
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Use the rear io panel input, not the front case input and get away from motherboard sound input as soon as you possibly can. Save us a small amount of money and get a dedicated device, there are lots of cheap and good options. You could hit up a pawn shop and get an m-audio box since they seem to be everywhere, pick up a focusrite sapphire 2by2 and if you only need one audio input then you can get a clone of a behringer UCG102 from ebay for like $15.
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Brandon Strader reacted to a post in a topic: Guitar settings in FL Studio?
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Guitars are my thing. I am trying to get better at the synth guitar though
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Aster reacted to a post in a topic: Guitar settings in FL Studio?
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It's a preset in guitar rig 5 where the delay/reverb of each note is pitch modulated, I recognize it a mile away. In metal and djent styles of music guitarists use shimmer effects which is ways of routing delay or reverb into pitch shifting. You will hear the same and similar sounds on this guys youtube demo: The original recording where this came from was on the song balerina 12/24 Vai took an eventide with separate TCE delays so you you would get a duplicated arpeggio. If you want guitar on your music and for it to sound good then there are people here that can play well and have the required setups. Sagnewshreds has a good setup for heavier styles of metal and I'm free to record on Sundays myself
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MindWanderer reacted to a post in a topic: CastleMania - A Castlevania/Pro Wrestling Concept Album
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Current OCR Projects Situation: Analysis and Solutions
Aster replied to Chernabogue's topic in General Discussion
Hi all, I came here after being away for a few years looking to get into some work as recording tracks and collaborating was incredibly fun for me. I searched through all the projects and it's difficult to tell which ones are able to be worked on or not as even active projects seem to have deadlines years ago but then this thread says they are open to new people, it's confusing and scared me off asking about a few of them. It would be great to compose a track or two or even do some session recording again. -
Aster changed their profile photo
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Stirring the pot: The analog vs digital debate
Aster replied to Majiffy's topic in Music Composition & Production
Oh man, those were the days! I used to be hunched over my 4 track recorder every month when guitar techniques and total guitar would release new backing track cds. So many old jams, those days were magic when you had to wing it at times and special stuff would happen. -
Stirring the pot: The analog vs digital debate
Aster replied to Majiffy's topic in Music Composition & Production
They're the same thing but the difference is evity. Digital equipment and vst software nearly always puts out a perfect processed result, time after time. Analogue equipment can be influenced by more variables of physics.. Analogue gear in the classic sense is imperfect in production and different units will share different qualities. Vacuum tubes are not all equal and wear out and have more sag. The power quality from the mains greatly affects tube drive. Mechanical components are not identical, hand wiring plays a part too. The audio environment is more evitable as a whole with analogue gear especially when you consider there's a lot of gear that must be mic'd due to hardware limitations. Analogous gear though can be replicated with care and attention to a level of utter perfection but that's what makes it imperfect. A bit of a contradiction but perfectly replicating one piece of analogue equipment means all copies of the digital emulation are of the same piece of gear. All in all, digital is best in function and in signal quality if you can have random evity calculated into the software. There's glue vst's that can be layered to simulate it. I have a neve strip glue emulator that caters for my warm sounds. -
Haunted shores have some of the best metal sounds to my ears. of course ..i might be a bit ..uhh ..biased.
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There is a factor called instructions per clock (ipc). This is the amount of calculations that a processor thread can do in one individual clock. Imagine a processor called pentium 4. Pentium 4 was terrible so lets imaginably call (for demonstrations sake) the ipc of pentium 4 one instruction per clock. This means that P4 at 3.0 ghz can do 3,000,000,000 simple operations/movements. Lets take a nice ivy bridge processor (the newest intel architecture released last week). For demonstrations sake (and because I cant be bothered finding the actual ipc difference of p4 and IB) let's call IB at 12 ipc's. You can see that ivy bridge is 12 times faster at 3.0 ghz than pentium 4. This is why it is not wise to use requirements on the back of software boxes. It's guff for the uninformed. A 3ghz pentium 4/pentium d will be utterly annihilated by a sandy/ivy bridge at the same 'speed' There's other factors like that pentium 4 is 1 core 2 threads and IB is 4 cores and 8 threads, then you have advanced instruction sets giving IB massive short cuts and turbo boost and memory controllers etc. If you want real specific advice, a dual core processor at 1.5 ghz will not substitute for a piece of software that doesn't have perfect multi-threading capability. In this day and age you should have at minimum a core 2 duo at 3.0 ghz. Budget today system = i3 2120 Mid range today system = i5 2500k Good tier = 2600/3770k. AMD are behind in all price to performance areas, they have far lower ipc than intel to the point that the dual core i3 2120 outperforms their 3.6ghz phenom 2 quad core chips. Don't touch bulldozer with a bargepole either as it's the worst processor architecture in history. A titanic product fond of eating power, spewing out heat and notoriously slower than amds older phenom 2 models. Go intel. Not fanboyism, they have better ipc and for real-time applications like music production stuff, they are absolute king over amd's low ipc high clockspeed guff. You'd be foolish to build a DAW box today without at least going up to sandy bridge era intel products.
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That's a good idea too. Perhaps you could even at some point learn a little yourself. The guitar is a useful thing to learn