Try this when you have completed your song, insert the same synth/vst and use the same sound as the original one. Clone the original track into the second synth/vst. Go into piano roll settings in one of these, and change16/4 into 128/4 then move all the notes by 1/128th to the right by using you arrow key on your computers keyboard,
Hey presto, what do you think.
How to spice up your bass sequencesModerators: Christophe, Mark
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Re: How to spice up your bass sequences An audio example would be great . ..before and after . ........because i didn't understood !
Re: How to spice up your bass sequences
Ok will do will just do 4 bars ok one on its own =1 two the same =2 and one using this method =3 http://soundcloud.com/m-projekt/one http://soundcloud.com/m-projekt/two http://soundcloud.com/m-projekt/three
Re: How to spice up your bass sequencesI like 2 most. It's big but doesn't sound too muddy like 3. It's more clear and present and thus supporting the bass sound in a better way. 3 is too much send to space with that chorus effect. The bass gets lost.
Re: How to spice up your bass sequences
cheers soundcloud is not the best sound quality when its plaid through mp3 player you can tell the difference.
Re: How to spice up your bass sequencesThis very trick also works well in situations similar to what I have found myself in. I've been collaborating with a guitar player that lives across the state of Michigan from me. Since we don't have the luxery of jamming in the same studio, I will FTP a few synth and drum lines to him. He will then play a few guitar riffs and send THOSE to the FTP site. I will download the guitar parts he played. Typically, he only leaves a single guitar line for each part of the song we are working on. A single guitar part sounds weak in a finished mix. So, I clone the guitar line to two audio tracks, nudge the cloned line to the right, just a tad, pan the original file hard left, pan the cloned track hard right, EQ the two lines slightly different. Bus the two lines out, compress the lines to keep them nicely contained in the mix, and presto - a single line of recorded guitar now sounds like a virtual wall of sound that fits snugly into the final mix! Following the Original Poster's direction reveals that it does make for a nice, thick bass sound - especially if you add the panning of the two lines away from center. Effective, yet easy to do. Nice tip!
Windows 10 Professional / Intel Core i7-4790K (4.0 GHz) / 16 GB RAM / 2TB Primary HD / 650GB Secondary HD / 3TB External Storage / E-MU 1616m PCIe/ a load of various VST instruments and effects / a bunch of DX effects / Orion 8.504
Re: How to spice up your bass sequences
Cheers you can even have 4 basses running using 2 different synths ie Wasp and X Poly. Pan 1 of each left and 1 of each right. So for example you have the left pan using the X Poly in normal mode the Wasp 1/128th behind. On the right the Wasp in normal mode the X Poly 1/128th behind. Happy Christmas
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