..and in the last video(!). Add them together and perhaps if you can find the stems for the brass section. I believe the multistems are out there on the internet. Would be cool to see how it sounds blended together. Layering is magic when it works!
We are so lucky to live in times where everybody has access to all those great synths via plugins ❤ (I know the real deal are the analogs but the digital ones come veery close)
This is cool. I had no idea this sound actually compromised of 3 different synths olayed together along with a real acoustic brass section playing live. No wonder it sounds so big on the record!!!!!! Thanks for sharing this and showing us how to create a portion of the sound on a Prophet 5. Very interesting indeed!!!
I would love to see how you would design the sounds today, and what synths you would use now. Not that the originals need changing because they are perfect as they are, but just interested in sound design aspect. I'm assuming you would still choose to use vintage synths?
@@Andronicus2007 I didn’t mean copying the sounds on other hardware but more like the opposite of that. I mean like if Michael Jackson called Anthony today and said they are creating a remix/alternative take/anniverdary celebration album of Thriller, and asked Anthony if he was interested in designing the synth sounds for that. And that they wouldn’t change any notes from the originals but with an alternative sound design. In the same ball park/universe as the original sounds but different enough that if feels like an alternative version, and possibly utilizing some different synths that weren’t available in 1982.
@@epicon6How would you do it? If MJ rang me, no.1 I'd have a heart attack, but yeah in 2023 you're gonna have a totally different approach. I think Quincy Jones's idea of having a brass section in that section comes from his Jazz and R&B background. The synths are also brassy, and reinforce the sound of the real brass. I can't imagine anyone arranging something like this today. To me, it sounds like a big exclamation mark, so you'd want something punchy in the place of this section, if you redid this as a 2023 track IMO.
@@epicon6 I think you’d generally approach it similarly, many pros still use analog synths today, however they would likely be mixed and processed quite differently, and there would likely also be additional sampled elements, as well as soft synths mixed in, but I feel the core of the sound would likely still be analog. Though I think the Juno has tended to become much more popular today then the Prophet and would be the more likely choice, and the Jupiter is almost never used today
I don't know anything about music but every time I see an Anthony Marinelli video I want to buy a synth and dive into it.
DO IT
You must do it...before it changes your mind.
It’s a real pleasure to see you performing and programing the songs
Blessings to you for this great work 🙏🏾
This is the face of the music right here. The true creators. The innovators.
You have no idea how important this is to document. So interesting as well.
This is invaluable information and serves as presarvation of culture and technology if you think about it.
Thank you so much for putting this out here… I’ve been obsessing lately over famous synth sounds and they can be hard to decipher
..and in the last video(!). Add them together and perhaps if you can find the stems for the brass section. I believe the multistems are out there on the internet. Would be cool to see how it sounds blended together. Layering is magic when it works!
We are so lucky to live in times where everybody has access to all those great synths via plugins ❤ (I know the real deal are the analogs but the digital ones come veery close)
This is cool. I had no idea this sound actually compromised of 3 different synths olayed together along with a real acoustic brass section playing live. No wonder it sounds so big on the record!!!!!!
Thanks for sharing this and showing us how to create a portion of the sound on a Prophet 5.
Very interesting indeed!!!
Pure genius!
Anthony is now an influencer of synths
That’s so cool well done. Amazing.❤
Awesome!
This is awesome!!!
He would make q great chef
Amazing 🎉
I wished I could turn back the clock to the 80s.
Its the live brass thats brings the meat.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I would love to see how you would design the sounds today, and what synths you would use now. Not that the originals need changing because they are perfect as they are, but just interested in sound design aspect.
I'm assuming you would still choose to use vintage synths?
You can just put pretty much the same settings into plugs and get similar results, you know like Serum, TAL UNO-LX, J-8 ect!
@@Andronicus2007 I didn’t mean copying the sounds on other hardware but more like the opposite of that.
I mean like if Michael Jackson called Anthony today and said they are creating a remix/alternative take/anniverdary celebration album of Thriller, and asked Anthony if he was interested in designing the synth sounds for that. And that they wouldn’t change any notes from the originals but with an alternative sound design. In the same ball park/universe as the original sounds but different enough that if feels like an alternative version, and possibly utilizing some different synths that weren’t available in 1982.
@@epicon6How would you do it? If MJ rang me, no.1 I'd have a heart attack, but yeah in 2023 you're gonna have a totally different approach. I think Quincy Jones's idea of having a brass section in that section comes from his Jazz and R&B background. The synths are also brassy, and reinforce the sound of the real brass. I can't imagine anyone arranging something like this today. To me, it sounds like a big exclamation mark, so you'd want something punchy in the place of this section, if you redid this as a 2023 track IMO.
@@epicon6 I think you’d generally approach it similarly, many pros still use analog synths today, however they would likely be mixed and processed quite differently, and there would likely also be additional sampled elements, as well as soft synths mixed in, but I feel the core of the sound would likely still be analog. Though I think the Juno has tended to become much more popular today then the Prophet and would be the more likely choice, and the Jupiter is almost never used today
😮😮😮❤❤❤❤❤
You think you know music pretty well. And then you see people fluctuating knobs and hear no difference, but you KNOW it’s there, and you feel SO dumb
Which synthesizer sounds most like the prophet five in garage band? Or the Casio, CS 80?
Composed or Comprises. Jeez
Sorry sounds nothing like it
No i don,te like it
It sounds good when mixed into the song. Of course it's all very 80s, for better or worse!