Guys,
That synth sound, it's that old school sound. I've got no idea how to recreate it in a soft-synth. Is it because of the typical analog synth that's being used that it is not possible to mimic it on a software basis?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o8V8AxhjIYA
(Synth stabs) Tyree - T's Revenge It Takes A Thief
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- mnml mmbr
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- mnml maxi
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great lofi sound. it's also semi microtonal to do this.Casanova808 wrote:Sample a chord hit with a 12bit sampler(SP1200 in this case), transpose it chromatically, run it through a cheap 80's rackmount digital reverb and record it to tape.
the way the ratio of frequencies work out in the music scale, are slightly shifted, exponentially. this is from rounding decimal places. if we sample a chord on a piano, say C major, with notes C E G. if you then playback this sample of the chord at a 3rd for example, the transposed notes are now E G# B. the E in this chord would be diatonic, but the G# and B would come out slightly sharp. probably not noticable, but listen to older house tracks and you can hear the drift in pitch with sampled chords.