Hope you all enjoy. There's a lot more that I would've wanted to cover. I would've loved to be more punctual when addressing some topics as well. But I feel like getting this out there should at least help bring everyone up to speed on my current recommendations and some techniques. Hope this helps guide your Drum making journey at least a little. I kind of feel like I just need to get these tutorials out in the open. Almost like throwing all the Lego's on the floor before organizing and refining the pieces. These tutorials are probably gonna move at a slow pace for the time being, but will get more and more refined as time passes. My end goal would be to make a fully rounded course that covers basics to advanced concepts of music creation.
I love this! tysm for sharing your knowledge with us! Also it'd be cool if you made a tutorial about creating trap snares, claps, hi-hats, crashes, etc.
10 seconds into the video you won me over. No introducing yourself, no cool visuals, NO BACKGROUND MUSIC, straight to the point. My man. Excellent educational content right here. Thank you!
I love this. Your way to explain everything in the video is really natural and also not stiff, fast or lacking of pauses as most sound generation / music video tutorials. This amount of content would be really hard to digest for me if the explaining wasn't so good, thanks
Bravo my guy. Very good video. Right now im using sytrus open in patcher, have the fundamental outside of ratio system, tuned to 170hz. Ive realized ive forgotten the click portion of it. Its been a while since ive opened fl. I used it for 12 years almost everyday doing sound design. Stopped using it for a year and im BAAAAAACCCKKK
After a whole day experimenting and finding out about Karplus-strong synthesis, I have the feeling this is going to be my guy. From the intro its pretty clear he gonna cook up some real live snare, in vital. Just what I need. God bless this man
I'm not entirely sure what you would call this waveform other than it having metallic characteristics. I'd probably classify it as a bell/inharmonic waveform if we're referring to older synth conventions.
A lot of heavy metal producer's over dub electronic snar hits over the top of the recordings of the drummers live performance. That's why in heavy metal their snar sounds more like gun shots.
wow it was ok till 10:45 then, lets click here then lets click there, lets turn another osc on then click here then there... what a mess.. i just dont understand, why you dont just take for every step like click, body, tale, ringing to 4 vitals each step got his own instance and not just throw everything into one synth and just going ham and doing 1000 clicks in every corner, without really explaining which env or lfo is for what. dude just a mess, big time. the idea is good, but the execution just horrible.
You suck at music making, you need to stop and give it up because you will never succeed in this area of life. Do yourself a favor and find another hobby or dream for that matter
Hope you all enjoy. There's a lot more that I would've wanted to cover. I would've loved to be more punctual when addressing some topics as well. But I feel like getting this out there should at least help bring everyone up to speed on my current recommendations and some techniques. Hope this helps guide your Drum making journey at least a little.
I kind of feel like I just need to get these tutorials out in the open. Almost like throwing all the Lego's on the floor before organizing and refining the pieces. These tutorials are probably gonna move at a slow pace for the time being, but will get more and more refined as time passes. My end goal would be to make a fully rounded course that covers basics to advanced concepts of music creation.
I love this! tysm for sharing your knowledge with us! Also it'd be cool if you made a tutorial about creating trap snares, claps, hi-hats, crashes, etc.
This is the best snare tutorial i’ve seen. I’ve messed about for years on my own and there’s cool tips in here that never occurred to me. Great work.
10 seconds into the video you won me over. No introducing yourself, no cool visuals, NO BACKGROUND MUSIC, straight to the point. My man. Excellent educational content right here. Thank you!
dude ive been looking for someone to actually explain this for ages, and you just pop up using the exact synth i am, tysm!
Light shard you're so awesome for teaching everyone in such a concise way
Thanks for this
Thanks! :P Always happy to help.
I love this. Your way to explain everything in the video is really natural and also not stiff, fast or lacking of pauses as most sound generation / music video tutorials.
This amount of content would be really hard to digest for me if the explaining wasn't so good, thanks
Bravo my guy. Very good video. Right now im using sytrus open in patcher, have the fundamental outside of ratio system, tuned to 170hz. Ive realized ive forgotten the click portion of it. Its been a while since ive opened fl. I used it for 12 years almost everyday doing sound design. Stopped using it for a year and im BAAAAAACCCKKK
Big brain sound design
After a whole day experimenting and finding out about Karplus-strong synthesis, I have the feeling this is going to be my guy. From the intro its pretty clear he gonna cook up some real live snare, in vital. Just what I need. God bless this man
Really great snare sound. Sophisticated and flexible.
Congrats mate you have explained well, I love the lessons that on board like this.
Thanks you for making content like this. 🙏🏻
Truly an amazing video!
I love long videos and a lot of information. Keeo doing it please. Thank you
“What will we need?”
*pulls up visual studio*
Underrated tutorial. Thank you!
Awesome video, really interesting!
Really enjoyed this video. Hearing the separate components was helpful. What kind of waveform is the metallic/ringing sound? (The 4th one)
I'm not entirely sure what you would call this waveform other than it having metallic characteristics.
I'd probably classify it as a bell/inharmonic waveform if we're referring to older synth conventions.
This is amazing. Thank you!
Cool beans. 👍
As long as it helps then I'm happy :P
Great tutorial, very thorough! Gets a little confusing somewhere in the middle though, just piles on a bit too much at once for me.
great video!
A lot of heavy metal producer's over dub electronic snar hits over the top of the recordings of the drummers live performance. That's why in heavy metal their snar sounds more like gun shots.
I was able to synthesize a snare drum with Audacity using the same techniques in this video.
wow it was ok till 10:45 then, lets click here then lets click there, lets turn another osc on then click here then there... what a mess.. i just dont understand, why you dont just take for every step like click, body, tale, ringing to 4 vitals each step got his own instance and not just throw everything into one synth and just going ham and doing 1000 clicks in every corner, without really explaining which env or lfo is for what. dude just a mess, big time. the idea is good, but the execution just horrible.
You suck at music making, you need to stop and give it up because you will never succeed in this area of life. Do yourself a favor and find another hobby or dream for that matter