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good VSTs for electro (pg. 4)
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| beats and beeps |
| quote: | Originally posted by oboema
All my vst synths surely do have their own character,if you'd ever given softsynths a try you would've known that. |
no they dont im talking about SIDE BY SIDE ING COMPARISONS
your pro53.dll file is the same as anybody elses.
I've used many softsynths, I own the korg legacy collection which are supposed to be pretty good at emulating hardware right? Well they get the job done to an extent but certainly do not sound the same. Sure you can make good tracks with them, you can make good tracks with anything. But I cant love a vst like a piece of hardware, and that makes all the difference if you have ever tried both. |
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| oboema |
Those are the first statements i've seen from you that i think are true.
However this doesn't prove anything regarding software. |
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| beats and beeps |
| quote: | Originally posted by oboema
Those are the first statements i've seen from you that i think are true.
However this doesn't prove anything regarding software. |
it proves that I have my reasons for liking hardware better, and so do electro musicians.
you guys also just dont know how hardware functions...triggering an arp with an audio signal will give you such different results than using a midi arpeggiator in sx3.
you might not want this difference for most types of music, but for electro you do. |
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| oboema |
| quote: | Originally posted by beats and beeps
no they dont im talking about SIDE BY SIDE ING COMPARISONS
your pro53.dll file is the same as anybody elses.
I've used many softsynths, I own the korg legacy collection which are supposed to be pretty good at emulating hardware right? |
So what?
If i create a song using the pro53 and it sounds good then wtf is the problem.
You're somehow thinking if i use the pro53,which is indeed the same as anybody elses,that the result will be the same as everyone else which is a false assumption.
Look at it this way,it doesn't matter what you use if the end result is great music. |
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| beats and beeps |
| quote: | Originally posted by oboema
So what?
If i create a song using the pro53 and it sounds good then wtf is the problem.
You're somehow thinking if i use the pro53,which is indeed the same as anybody elses,that the result will be the same as everyone else which is a false assumption.
Look at it this way,it doesn't matter what you use if the end result is great music. |
no not at all, you dont understand I listen to plenty of digital music still, but not when it comes to electro.
i mean honestly, I really like that buzz program and it sounds very digital...but i tend to find it like a dirty digital or something...but yeah i wouldnt make proper electro on it. of course one of the reasons i like buzz is cuz its got a tracker right, like the amiga. |
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| oboema |
| quote: | Originally posted by beats and beeps
it proves that I have my reasons for liking hardware better, and so do electro musicians.
you guys also just dont know how hardware functions...triggering an arp with an audio signal will give you such different results than using a midi arpeggiator in sx3.
you might not want this difference for most types of music, but for electro you do. |
So it's a matter of taste,but you're presenting it as the one and only truth which it clearly is not.
I'm pretty sure there are loads of electro making people out there that use software only and you might not even know it lol. |
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| beats and beeps |
| quote: | Originally posted by oboema
I'm pretty sure there are loads of electro making people out there that use software only and you might not even know it lol. |
I can't think of any? can you? Especially not any good ones. |
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| Watts |
To actually post something helpful:
80s Electro (the Hip-Hop kind):
808 for the drums
303 for the bass (any monophonic synth will probably do it).
Kraftwerk twerps
Some nice tinny strings
Electro house:
Vanguard is really good for this genre. It is simple enough to build new sounds while always offering new ones (huge permutation of possible waveforms).
I actually use a Juno-106 for my electro house basslines. Sometimes I'll use a saw or a pulse wave and run it through the II chorus (for that "vintage" sound). At the moment I can't think of any other soft-synths to suggest. |
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| oboema |
| quote: | Originally posted by beats and beeps
I can't think of any? can you? Especially not any good ones. |
There are loads of people using software in pretty much any electronic genre but somehow you think that it isn't used in your precious electro. :rolleyes:
Whatever man,i'm done talking to you. |
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| ASFSE |
| quote: | Originally posted by beats and beeps
electro relies and is inspired by the hardware more than any other genre, as such unless you have extensive experience with working with the hardware, it is unlikely that you will create good electro with vsts.
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ignorant ... as stated bfore... you dont need hardware to do
edit: fag |
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| beats and beeps |
| quote: | Originally posted by ASFSE
edit: fag |
yeah. black, gay, and electro. |
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| ASFSE |
| quote: | Originally posted by beats and beeps
yeah. black, gay, and electro. |
huh? |
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