Make your PROGRAMMED HARP GLISSANDOS sound ULTRA-REALISTIC!

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 41

  • @fishoscine1220
    @fishoscine1220 7 месяцев назад +7

    Bonus Tips:
    - The harp is diatonic. Therefore if you want a chromatic or octatonic scale, you'll need to either choose 7 notes or use two harps tuned differently.
    - Harpists need time to change pedals, so the piece requires harp modulating keys quickly, you should write for two harps.

    • @notanotherjamesmurphy5574
      @notanotherjamesmurphy5574 4 месяца назад

      what key are most harps tuned to, C ?

    • @fishoscine1220
      @fishoscine1220 4 месяца назад

      @@notanotherjamesmurphy5574 There are different types of harps. The pedal, most common in symphony orchestras, are tuned to C in their default position, yes. They have 7 pedals corresponding to the diatonic note in the key of C, that can each be sharpened or flattened.

  • @emmanuelschalit8853
    @emmanuelschalit8853 Год назад +8

    Great video Andreas. As a former student I can confirm that this approach works wonderfully and once you have done it a few times it becomes completely natural

  • @joegrint6280
    @joegrint6280 Год назад +12

    I never realised it was so complicated! 🙂

  • @MarioSchuurmans
    @MarioSchuurmans Год назад +5

    Wonderful! So usefull!

  • @PerchHunter
    @PerchHunter Год назад +6

    I want to say big thank You @Virtual Orchestration for making video which im ask so many times and we talking about :) Im more than sure that its super usefull not only for me but for hundreds composers. Fantastic work thank You very much !

  • @spuddyferret
    @spuddyferret Год назад +4

    Thanks for fixing the audio issues. Great video!

  • @PaulieDC
    @PaulieDC Год назад +4

    Whoa! Delete Overlaps in Cubase! How did I know that wasn't there?? That plus the Harp programming instruction makes this such a great video tutorial, thank you!

  • @Igor999007
    @Igor999007 Год назад +1

    I wish I had a teacher like Andreas, thank you!

  • @BarbaraHeckenlively
    @BarbaraHeckenlively 6 месяцев назад +1

    It's amazing what you know. However, as a harpist, at first I thought the glissando, by itself, had too many lower notes and needed to be cut by around 5 notes. It sounded a little muddy and something you may not know if you don't play. This glissando is only being played with the right hand. But then, when you played with the other instrumentation, it sounded fine.

  • @anonagain
    @anonagain Год назад +1

    Very helpful and complete - thank you!

  • @randallmauger5659
    @randallmauger5659 20 часов назад

    Very informative, thank you!

  • @jjrussell
    @jjrussell Год назад +2

    This whole channel is amazing. Thank you!

  • @EnrizeStockMusic
    @EnrizeStockMusic 10 месяцев назад

    That's cool! A faster workaround for pauses between up and down motion is to use both hands, this way you can start play exactly at the same time you finish the last note on first hand.

  • @NONFamers
    @NONFamers Год назад +4

    Great video! In Cubase Pro 12, you could enhance the method used for harp sample libraries without pedal settings by making a MIDI logical editor script doing the tweaks. This could come in handy if you need to use similar, but not identical, glissandos at different times in the same piece.

  • @נועםגולדשטייןאולפןהקלטות

    Very clearly explained. Thanks!

  • @StarshipTrooper4231
    @StarshipTrooper4231 Год назад +2

    That "drag your finger" technique was a major AHA for me. 😅

  • @JayMitchellMusic
    @JayMitchellMusic Год назад +1

    Very useful content. Especially with Cubase users! A lot of these tools can be used no matter what the HW you use!

  • @anthonystahl
    @anthonystahl Год назад +1

    fascinating video! so much great content in this series

  • @ObsessiveCostumingDude
    @ObsessiveCostumingDude Год назад +1

    Excellent tutorial! Thank you for making and sharing this with us. :)

  • @PatrickSchouten
    @PatrickSchouten Год назад

    what a great video!, thanks for sharing this

  • @MahlonBouldin
    @MahlonBouldin 7 месяцев назад

    Excellent tutorial!

  • @BrettWMcCoy
    @BrettWMcCoy Год назад +2

    Wow, so cool!
    I believe some harp libraries (like Hollywood Harp) have specific single note samples designed for making glissandos ("Glissando Technique"). Do you think these work better than or worse than EQing the stock plucked sustain notes?

    • @andreasbjorck
      @andreasbjorck Год назад +1

      Hey Brett! :) For libraries that have that option (especially if it's really sampled that way and not just "simulated") I would definitely use those samples - but given that not all harp libraries have that option, this is a useful technique that works well for all situations. I also wouldn't let it dictate my choice in library. In other words, if there's a particular harp that has the perfect sound for what I'm doing, but no dedicated gliss technique/playable gliss samples, then I'd still pick that and EQ it.

  • @ckpriyan5387
    @ckpriyan5387 Год назад

    this is very useful thank you

  • @solyarisoftware
    @solyarisoftware 9 месяцев назад

    great explanations!

  • @karayuschij
    @karayuschij Год назад

    Great tutorial!!
    To soften the attack of the harp I would have used a compressor or a transient shaper

  • @DmytroGordon
    @DmytroGordon Год назад

    This is great, thank you!

  • @शिव_सागर
    @शिव_सागर Год назад

    Thank You Very Much!
    🙂🙏

  • @issiewizzie
    @issiewizzie Год назад +1

    I am enlightened 😅

  • @BenMartinBox
    @BenMartinBox Год назад

    Nice tips.

  • @omerfaran8514
    @omerfaran8514 Год назад

    Cool video thanks! Just a question if anyone knows, if you do different patterns than pentatonic such as 1-2-3-5-8, is it unrealistic/ not playable?

  • @hrniko6089
    @hrniko6089 Год назад

    Could you please talk about String Glissandos

  • @jamesbastani4295
    @jamesbastani4295 Год назад

    I don't think the doubling of the enhormonics makes much of a difference when the harp is being used mostly as an effect, masked under the heavy orchestration. I do believe that it makes a huge difference when it's being used as a feature instrument, like the solo passages in Scheherazade.

  • @kulanen
    @kulanen Год назад

    Great!

  • @GeoffreyRicketts
    @GeoffreyRicketts Год назад

    Awesome video thank you.
    I had left a different comment before watching the entire video.
    I have since deleted the comment as you explained either verbally or with another plugin what I had pointed out.
    I wanted to let you know as a deleted comment is sometimes confusing to me as a creator.

  • @Eichro
    @Eichro 9 месяцев назад

    the acepinter trick

  • @douglasromayne328
    @douglasromayne328 Год назад

    Nice tutorial, and I appreciate the instruction, but that Cineharp tuning diagram is bonkers. They have the 3 / 4 pedals laid out like a real harp diagram but the pitches are wrong and the flat-natural-sharp placement is completely backward. I trust you're teaching your students the correct way to notate.