Foxtrot89 wrote:It's fairly straight forward. You go from sparse instrumentation to silence, or a build up. Then you just "drop" in the meat of the song. The hard part of it is writing the actual music and/or finding the heavy hitting sounds. Kind of difficult/impossible to tell someone how to write a decent, hard hitting song, so that part is all up to you.
Kopachris wrote:1. Big buildup (I mean big)
2. 1 beat of sudden silence (adds an effect similar to syncopation when you throw in the "meat" of the song)
3. ???
4. Profit!
jackupthoseapples wrote:there's a multitude of tutorials on youtube for making hard drops for every DAW. when in doubt, youtube.
Lavender_Harmony wrote: It doesn't matter what synth you use, the most popular being Massive, but any synth is capable, Reaktor, Sylenth, the important thing is to learn how to use them. It's all and well making some screechy wobble sound, but I've literally had well known musicians in the community ask me what some of my simple pads and saw leads are made in, and when I tell them Massive they are dumbstruck. Fact is 90% of brony musicians think Massive is for wubs only, and don't realise that it is an incredibly powerful synth.
vladnuke wrote:Lavender_Harmony wrote: It doesn't matter what synth you use, the most popular being Massive, but any synth is capable, Reaktor, Sylenth, the important thing is to learn how to use them. It's all and well making some screechy wobble sound, but I've literally had well known musicians in the community ask me what some of my simple pads and saw leads are made in, and when I tell them Massive they are dumbstruck. Fact is 90% of brony musicians think Massive is for wubs only, and don't realise that it is an incredibly powerful synth.
EXACTLY
MY USE OF MASSIVE IS NOW REDEEMED.
But seriously, I use massive for everything ever.
Habanc wrote:vladnuke wrote:Lavender_Harmony wrote: It doesn't matter what synth you use, the most popular being Massive, but any synth is capable, Reaktor, Sylenth, the important thing is to learn how to use them. It's all and well making some screechy wobble sound, but I've literally had well known musicians in the community ask me what some of my simple pads and saw leads are made in, and when I tell them Massive they are dumbstruck. Fact is 90% of brony musicians think Massive is for wubs only, and don't realise that it is an incredibly powerful synth.
EXACTLY
MY USE OF MASSIVE IS NOW REDEEMED.
But seriously, I use massive for everything ever.
I concur...
Although, does it justify having 6 separate massive plugins for a single track? Because I miiight be doing that right now... (2 main synths (layered), Bass, 2 side synths and a pad)
Maybe I should try to utilize Z3ta more.
On topic: Sometimes having a surge of sub-bass in that one "second of silence" before the drop can be useful, but it's situational I guess (I can't contribute much after what's been said).
Lavender_Harmony wrote:For Ruby Skies and Violet Clouds I used about 30+ instances of Massive.
Lavender_Harmony wrote:For Ruby Skies and Violet Clouds I used about 30+ instances of Massive.
HoovesUp! wrote:Lavender put it best, if not for how much information you can get out of there. I'd just be restating all of that! XD
Be careful with sub-bass/808-style drop sounds. Logic's got one in the Downtempo 2 Ultrabeat kit that works just fine, but the same goes with every sample or synthesized sine drop: too much sub-bass at one point can kill a mix. Also, if you're using Massive (who isn't nowadays?), the performance tab is your best friend when it comes to adding some movement to otherwise static-sounding wobbles or mid-range stuff.
vladnuke wrote:But seriously, I use massive for everything ever.
natsukashi wrote:vladnuke wrote:But seriously, I use massive for everything ever.
So do I~
XXDarkShadow79XX wrote:natsukashi wrote:vladnuke wrote:But seriously, I use massive for everything ever.
So do I~
WHO DOESN'T?!
Lavender_Harmony wrote:XXDarkShadow79XX wrote:natsukashi wrote:
So do I~
WHO DOESN'T?!
I use Massive, Razor, Reaktor, ES2, but enough about me. You should see Tomb's squad of synths
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests