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| JAH WOBBLE, LIEBEZEIT & CZUKAY - How Much Are They - 1981 |
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JAH WOBBLE, JAKI LIEBEZEIT & HOLGER CZUKAY
"HOW MUCH ARE THEY". Classic track from
ex-PiL member Jah Wobble, in collaboration
with Can members Jaki Liebezeit and Holger
Czukay. This song became a cult classic in
Los Angeles due to heavy radio airplay in the
early 80's.
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BRINGING 4GOTTEN TRAXXX BACK TO THE MASSES!
We're posting audio versions of
long-forgotten music from the 70s, 80s, and
90s for your listening pleasure. We tend to
focus on songs or versions that either have
no existing video or one that is not posted
on YouTube, and/or are out-of-print, rare and
difficult to find.
WE PROVIDE THIS SERVICE FOR YOUR LISTENING
PLEASURE ONLY, any copying, reproducing or
downloading is strictly prohibited. We do not
trade or sell mp3s, so don't even ask. All of
the items pictured come from private
collections, and they are not for sale.
Our purpose is to highlight songs that have
been unjustly ignored over time, to reunite
fans of these long-lost artists, and to
hopefully generate enough renewed interest in
these past classics to inspire the music
industry to offer these songs for sale as
legal downloads or reissue these them as
compilations.
ENJOY AND REMINISCE! Tags : jah wobble jaki liebezeit holger czukay how much are they new wave pil can 80's 80s post punk kroq alternative |
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Affichage : 16011
Durée : 291 s |
| Tutorial 1-Dubstep Wobble Bass with Massive |
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www.myspace.com/thesynthesist
This is the first tutorial from The
Synthesist, covering the process behind
making a Dubstep wobble bass sound.
This video shows the use of Native
Instruments' MASSIVE synthesizer, which
shifted the paradigm for software synthesis
development in late 2006. MASSIVE's fat,
analog sound is unique to the soft-synth
world, offering a wide scope of sound design
possibilities.
But underneath all that, is an extremely
simple-to-use, great sounding engine, that
can provide some of the baddest bass tones
you've ever heard.
Check out the video, and the patches that are
linked through the site below.
http://www.thesynthesist.com
Notes on the patches:
Wobble 1- This is a basic demonstration of
the ideas seen in the video. One oscillator,
one filter, one LFO. very basic.
Wobble 2- This is the patch that was created
in the video. You have a the dual-oscillator
setup, using the same wavetable and settings,
one is simply pitched an octave down. Try
putting an LFO on the pitch of one of the
oscillators, but only modulate the pitch by
.10 or .15 of a half step. This will give a
thicker and different feel to the sound.
Wobble 3- This is an example that has been
used in one of The Synthesist's tracks
previously. Its an example of
experimentation with the LFO, applied to the
Ring Modulator in addition to the Filter's
Frequency Cutoff. Try applying an LFO to the
Phase knob in the Modulation Oscillator.
Also, the Performer function is displayed,
rather than a simple LFO, so that you can
write in your own modulating patterns.
The biggest rule of creating a fat bass sound
from scratch is START SIMPLE. Bass tones get
muddied very easily, so very minor changes
can have a dramatic effect on your sound. Tags : electronic hip-hop dubstep dub wobble bass tutorial massive native instruments synthesist bad ass |
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Affichage : 78410
Durée : 182 s |
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