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music question
 

offline cygnus from nowhere and everyplace on 2007-09-19 12:22 [#02121632]
Points: 11920 Status: Regular



i asked zeus this in the logic thread

visualize 4 channels - the first 3 have drums and bass
material and the last one (4) is getting sound from a denon
cd turntable and it's being skratched all over the place

ok so i want channels 1 and 2 to be turned completely off
whenever sound is coming into channel 4. zeus said use a
gate w/ side chain but i dont have one, can anyone reccomend
me one. would be dope also if i could set it up to where
channels 1 and 2 get pitched up high when that gate cuts
them off and slides back down in pitch when the skratching
is done, you feel me? i have no idea how to do this and
dont really have the time to learn, and would appreciate any
hlp


 

offline cygnus from nowhere and everyplace on 2007-09-19 12:25 [#02121633]
Points: 11920 Status: Regular



anyone used this?


 

offline w M w from London (United Kingdom) on 2007-09-19 21:55 [#02121845]
Points: 21456 Status: Regular



Denon didn't support multichannel harvesting on their Plent
models, only Plent II's. If you do have a Plent (I) though,
there is an open source workaround patched together with pvs
and smurfscript so it would definately be helpful to be
fluent in those. It's best to visit their wiki to find out
which of the many versions are compatible with your
operating system and particular setup. Alternately, you
could get a speedcore brik pad which you can sometimes still
find on the backs of old pentium II's. Buy wire of at least
5 different conductor colors, 6 is better, and follow the
directions on the underside of the brik in reverse order.
Weld it onto one of your records and whenever it is turned
on, the output should be directed back into the input
resulting in a feedback overflow. This overflow spills out
onto the brik and saves the information for you as long as
you have it wired up correctly. Then you'll have to upload
this info into some software that is only currently
available on linux. I forget what the name is but ask
around. Once that is done, tape your computers mouse onto
your turntable to act as the antenna conductor. But the way
it is set up you'll only be able to receive the signal from
your monitor so glue or tape any standard H model microphone
to the monitor. That should do the trick and split the sound
into seperately controllable parts. I think the technique is
called octave filter overflow bypassing so look it up in
wikipedia for more info.


 

offline bryce_berny from chronno (Canada) on 2007-09-19 22:25 [#02121849]
Points: 1568 Status: Lurker



spells it out well


 


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