Oh man, I’m jammin to this on the tv and I thought I’d check the comments & as I opened the video on my phone the tv and the phone combined created this double kick type thing going on and it was so cool. I recorded it on my iPad. It’s really nothing too fancy, but it sounds cool being all ping ponged the way it was. Love the video/track! I need a DFAM 🤔
Great Jam. Specially when it comes to the kinda melodic part. I never use the DFAM for Bassdrums, because I don't like that click, that comes and goes (depending on where the trigger hits the waveform). I noticed immediately at the first seconds :) Wish they would have implemented a waveform restart per trigger option or at least a softer attack (the one it has is way to slow).
Hey, thanks for commenting! Agreed, the unpredictable click is quite a problem. It can be made less apparent with some specific settings (for example using a square wave as source) but that limits the possibilities for using other sounds at the same time. Maybe it could be less hearable in a live setting or a busy arrangement?
Hello thanks for commenting! As much as I love the idea of playing two DFAMs at once, having so many possibilities on the synth market I don't think I can justify getting a second of the same 😅 maybe one day...
Thanks! I think you can see the patching more or less on the video. It changes slightly in the jam but mostly it's pitch -> noise level and vco2 -> vcf mod
For each step you can program different pitch and different velocity, so technically the answer is no. However you can make pitch only affect one oscillator so you have a kick on some steps and "melodic" stuff on others. You can also patch the noise generator to pitch so that whenever you change pitch for one of the steps more noise is added to that step. There are many possibilities like that which you can use to have different sounds on different steps. Not sure if my answer is clear enough so watch some tutorials or read more to understand it better :)
@@MaharadzaStunt That was perfectly clear. I've been looking for examples of getting a single track to sound like it has two parts. DFAM seems really good at this. I've been building my own synth & deciding between two thinner sounding tracks or one fat track. This method seems like the sweet spot.
5:25 is my favourite part, I'm going to buy a dfam just for that sound alone, awesome performance and machine
Oh man, I’m jammin to this on the tv and I thought I’d check the comments & as I opened the video on my phone the tv and the phone combined created this double kick type thing going on and it was so cool. I recorded it on my iPad. It’s really nothing too fancy, but it sounds cool being all ping ponged the way it was. Love the video/track! I need a DFAM 🤔
wicked. this is what the dfam is all about, great job!
Super one track...one synth
Brilliant!
This slaps so hard
brilliantly simple, simply brilliant ... in German ... genial einfach, einfach genial = D F A M
Great one!!
This is amazing ❤
Your jam is reference to me you inspired me brother thank you
❤️❤️❤️
+
Good job dude !!
Super 👍
Bonne session. Bravo
Great Jam. Specially when it comes to the kinda melodic part. I never use the DFAM for Bassdrums, because I don't like that click, that comes and goes (depending on where the trigger hits the waveform). I noticed immediately at the first seconds :) Wish they would have implemented a waveform restart per trigger option or at least a softer attack (the one it has is way to slow).
Hey, thanks for commenting! Agreed, the unpredictable click is quite a problem. It can be made less apparent with some specific settings (for example using a square wave as source) but that limits the possibilities for using other sounds at the same time. Maybe it could be less hearable in a live setting or a busy arrangement?
This is nice. I use a Volca Kick myself and use my DFAM in higher registers. This is great though. One synth.
Echt Fett und schön knackig wie damals 👍🙏👌🤗
Are there any effects involved or ist that the raw output of the DFAM?
100% raw
would love to see what you could do with two dfams, one in LP, one in HP.
Hello thanks for commenting! As much as I love the idea of playing two DFAMs at once, having so many possibilities on the synth market I don't think I can justify getting a second of the same 😅 maybe one day...
like 1
This is so good!!!! What's the patching mate??
Thanks! I think you can see the patching more or less on the video. It changes slightly in the jam but mostly it's pitch -> noise level and vco2 -> vcf mod
Where’s the noise out going? The white cable.
It's actually noise in, not out. It's connected to pitch out as shown in the video. There's no external patching.
Sounds like you can program a different drum sound for each step in the sequence. Is that the case?
For each step you can program different pitch and different velocity, so technically the answer is no. However you can make pitch only affect one oscillator so you have a kick on some steps and "melodic" stuff on others. You can also patch the noise generator to pitch so that whenever you change pitch for one of the steps more noise is added to that step. There are many possibilities like that which you can use to have different sounds on different steps. Not sure if my answer is clear enough so watch some tutorials or read more to understand it better :)
@@MaharadzaStunt That was perfectly clear. I've been looking for examples of getting a single track to sound like it has two parts. DFAM seems really good at this. I've been building my own synth & deciding between two thinner sounding tracks or one fat track. This method seems like the sweet spot.