Producing My First Vaporwave Track on the Koala Sampler

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Комментарии • 8

  • @patrickbodine1300
    @patrickbodine1300 2 месяца назад

    Koala is absolutely the best!

  • @888berg
    @888berg 7 месяцев назад +1

    Love Vapour Ware - excellent video... eager see more of this!! Wooot

    • @Waxadisc
      @Waxadisc  7 месяцев назад +1

      thanks, I will do some on Ableton next but also gonna try and do more koala videos as its a cool little app

  • @PabloDeModeOfficial
    @PabloDeModeOfficial 7 месяцев назад +1

    Great tutorial! Nice to see you making a different genre ❤

    • @Waxadisc
      @Waxadisc  7 месяцев назад +1

      thanks Pablo. I gotta try new stuff, might even make an album now in vaporwave

  • @Drrolfski
    @Drrolfski 7 месяцев назад +1

    Inspiring video, reminds me of my deep disco period in the 2010s. I have a ton of these records, I should take a shot at this genre as well.
    For sampling, I play around with Koala Sampler (iPad), Ableton Live + Push 2 (PC), or my MPC Live 2, depending on my mood. Lately I've been mostly enjoying my MPC Live 2. It delivers a very tactile experience, has full DAW capability, and it's a great device to take outside and make music wherever I feel inspired. All have their strengths though. Koala is the most intuitive of the three while Ableton excels in looping, jamming, arranging and finishing.

    • @Waxadisc
      @Waxadisc  7 месяцев назад

      i had an mpc last year for a while on loan, I liked it but being an ableton push person for so long it took me a while to wrap my head around it but now I might get another one and try again. Koala is just great all round for its in the pocket and you can go outside like you said. Overall though we are spoilt for choice :)

    • @Drrolfski
      @Drrolfski 7 месяцев назад

      @@Waxadisc The MPC platform is absolutely a bitch to get your head around if you're coming from a more conventional DAW environment like Ableton. Once you get your head around it though it makes for a fairly fast workflow for what is basically a standalone DAW. What helped me getting the hang of it is using the MPC Bible.