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your fav (sound) machines
 

offline scheme88 from Tokyo (Japan) on 2004-05-26 22:14 [#01209604]
Points: 801 Status: Lurker



i wanna unique machines.


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2004-05-26 22:15 [#01209606]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



like... a sewing machine?

or... a rock tumbler?

or like a mpc?


 

offline forck_02lynix from brooklyn on 2004-05-26 22:16 [#01209610]
Points: 4000 Status: Regular



howsabout a grinding wheel
or a dotmatrix printerrrr
or a blenderwithamicrophoneinit oh wait someone did that
already


 

offline scheme88 from Tokyo (Japan) on 2004-05-26 22:22 [#01209614]
Points: 801 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zeus: #01209606



i like sewing machine sounds :)
but, i asked about the synth module.


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2004-05-26 22:26 [#01209616]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



ah, ok.

absynth 2 is my personal fav


 

offline thecurbcreeper from United States on 2004-05-26 22:27 [#01209618]
Points: 6045 Status: Lurker



yay!


 

offline scheme88 from Tokyo (Japan) on 2004-05-26 23:50 [#01209657]
Points: 801 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zeus: #01209616



thanks!! checking...


 

offline scheme88 from Tokyo (Japan) on 2004-05-26 23:53 [#01209660]
Points: 801 Status: Lurker | Followup to thecurbcreeper: #01209618



wow! great link. thanks!!!



 

offline wimp on 2004-05-26 23:58 [#01209665]
Points: 1389 Status: Lurker



Dishwashings Machines. I love washing machines. When I was
a kid, I used to sleep out in our family room sometimes, and
I'd love to fall asleep to the sound of the dishwasher.

I love droning sounds (i.e. fans, wind, etc.). Star Trek:
The Next Generation also made me very relaxed, the
Enterprise is always humming in the background.


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2004-05-27 00:04 [#01209671]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



absynth 2


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2004-05-27 00:13 [#01209690]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Zeus: #01209616 | Show recordbag



I agree with you. Fantastic sounding piece of kit.


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2004-05-27 00:14 [#01209696]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #01209690



Ive barely used it really... since the bug I had for like...
6 months.

but the upgrade came out, so Im reading the manual from
cover to cover

and it rocks


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2004-05-27 00:23 [#01209707]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Zeus: #01209696 | Show recordbag



My only criticism would be that it's quite hard to program a
patch from scratch with the intention of it sounding like
something in particular (whereas in say, simsynth or
subtractor I can think, okay, lets make a snare or, lets
make some strings). I have skim read the manual, but I
should sit down and read it from cover to cover.


 

offline Zeus from San Francisco (United States) on 2004-05-27 00:25 [#01209708]
Points: 14042 Status: Lurker



hmm, i dont think so. If you know how to make a sound, its
basically the same across platforms.

same concept



 

offline bogala from NYC (United States) on 2004-05-27 00:43 [#01209725]
Points: 5125 Status: Regular



Haha, yeah, the enterprise was very nap friendly. My
favorite is analogue synths. Ms-20, Jupiters, etc..


 

offline cie jiks mawp from motion to descend (Australia) on 2004-05-27 01:07 [#01209743]
Points: 1171 Status: Lurker



Juno!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


 

offline scheme88 from Tokyo (Japan) on 2004-05-27 07:33 [#01210275]
Points: 801 Status: Lurker | Followup to Zeus: #01209671



indeed. it seems to be very unique :)


 

offline J Swift from United Kingdom on 2004-05-27 07:45 [#01210303]
Points: 650 Status: Regular



I like Absynth a lot, definetly my favorite softsynth, but
yeah, I never program sounds from scratch - There just
aren't enough hours in the day for me to take on something
like that.

Juno gets a lot of use 'cos it's so instant - And the sound
quality is fantastic.

Over the years my Roland XV module has probably become my
most useful studio tool - Definetly nothing special sound
wise - But when you know it inside out you can get almost
anything out of it in seconds... (Well, apart from the kind
of stuff you'd use a monosynth for anyway).

(I've had a damn bug for at least the last 6 months)


 


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