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| quote: | Originally posted by cronodevir
How are you able to tell the difference between dblue glitch and doing it the long way? |
I've used dBlue glitch to record about 40 bars of glitches from an original track, then spliced the non-shitty parts back into the original and added my own effects, and nobody really noticed it as the glitch "sound". It's a lazy man's approach, like wading through a thousand preset patches and samples instead of trying to make my own, but it actually still involves a lot of work.
Plain vanilla Glitch is, well, pretty obvious. It just doesn't provide a wide variety of rhythms, effects, or timbres in general. Plus, to an alert listener, it sounds random, because it is random. Good stutter/glitch edits are supposed to blend well; they should add character but not seem out of place. They should help the track's rhythm along rather than disrupting it. Throwing on a Glitch plugin and tweaking a few knobs doesn't accomplish any of this.
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