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Turntable Motor-off effect?
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| Wayne_B |
Hi guys, any recommendations on a good plugin for this effect? It's used on some Simon Patterson tracks. I haven't experimented yet but I'm guessing automating the pitch on a sample will do..
Any ideas or techniques?
Cheers!:) |
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| Storyteller |
| dBlue glitch has this effect (amongst others). Google it, it's a free plugin :) |
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| cryophonik |
| quote: | Originally posted by Storyteller
dBlue glitch has this effect (amongst others). Google it, it's a free plugin :) |
+1.
Also, if you've got cash to spend and want something even cooler that will do this and much more, check out Sugar Byte's Effectrix. |
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| djandymac |
| i might be wrong, but could u not automate the tempo track on your sequencer ? |
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| Mr.Mystery |
| quote: | Originally posted by djandymac
i might be wrong, but could u not automate the tempo track on your sequencer ? |
Tempo != pitch |
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| Wayne_B |
| Thanks for the replies!:) Will try out the recommended plugins. |
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| djandymac |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mr.Mystery
Tempo != pitch | i was wrong then lol |
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| DjWoody |
| quote: | Originally posted by djandymac
i might be wrong, but could u not automate the tempo track on your sequencer ? |
I get what you're trying to say, but in Ableton the slower you go, it starts sounding robotic and you get some weird but cool noises. It won't replicate the exact turntable power off sound. |
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| Beatflux |
| quote: | Originally posted by Mr.Mystery
Tempo != pitch |
You can set the warp mode in Ableton to repitch. |
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| DigiNut |
If you use a sequencer with good audio processing capabilities (i.e. Cubase) then you actually don't need any effects to do this, you can use an envelope to automate a pitch shift. The shape of a motor turning off is roughly a 1/x curve. Add a stutter, some distortion/overdrive, a little delay/reverb and you can put together some pretty cool effects that actually sound a lot better than the bog-standard spin-down.
Also, to Mr. Mystery: Tempo does = pitch if you alter it by resampling (the old-school method) as opposed to time-corrected pitch-shifting. Of course it all depends on what it really is that you want. |
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| Mr.Mystery |
| quote: | Originally posted by DigiNut
Also, to Mr. Mystery: Tempo does = pitch if you alter it by resampling (the old-school method) as opposed to time-corrected pitch-shifting. Of course it all depends on what it really is that you want. |
Yeah, but tempo is tempo and pitch is pitch. |
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