subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass after?

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6000
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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by 6000 » Fri Aug 03, 2012 12:25 pm

almostskate100 wrote:How then would I go about adding a clean, new sine wave under this if I no longer have a MIDI clip to reference which notes are being played?
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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by MassAphekt » Fri Aug 03, 2012 3:43 pm

I'm really loving the suggestions here, I suppose careful subbass to midrange processing would be best, resampled, split into bands leaving the sub unaffected with mid highs more processed, since I only feel one resample cycle is enough to get results im happy with , thanks a bunch yall i appreciate it :)
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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by sunny_b_uk » Fri Aug 03, 2012 11:42 pm

i resample a lot and all i gota say is dont worry too too much about the technicalities, i used 2 not resample since i was happy with my synthesis ability and didnt like the idea of losing the flexibility you get when sticking to midi, but if you just spend a whole lot of hours resampling, arranging & constantly automating parameters you'll make a lot of nice discoveries as you keep trying. its best to get good at using synthesis alone and resampling/fx chains as well, both worlds have a lot to offer so just keep trying and you'll naturally know what works for you once you've put in the hours :D
but yeh with subbass, no doubt ul have to high pass your resampled bass and then layer with a sine ;)

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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by drake89 » Sat Aug 04, 2012 4:20 am

uhm you can duplicate your midi track to be resampled before you flatten it or bounce it to audio, whatever you want to call it.

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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by Swelly » Sat Aug 04, 2012 4:34 am

sunny_b_uk wrote:i resample a lot and all i gota say is dont worry too too much about the technicalities, i used 2 not resample since i was happy with my synthesis ability and didnt like the idea of losing the flexibility you get when sticking to midi, but if you just spend a whole lot of hours resampling, arranging & constantly automating parameters you'll make a lot of nice discoveries as you keep trying. its best to get good at using synthesis alone and resampling/fx chains as well, both worlds have a lot to offer so just keep trying and you'll naturally know what works for you once you've put in the hours :D
but yeh with subbass, no doubt ul have to high pass your resampled bass and then layer with a sine ;)
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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by Toolman4 » Tue Aug 07, 2012 1:21 pm

This thread is a typical example of overthinking a topic and making it overcomplicated. ehbrums was right in that adding a sine wave after the resampling process is the best way and that only volume/pitch (I know they both do the same, but for beginners applying that lfo/envelope parameter ;) ) They way to think about it is this:

You create a midi pattern utilizing a bass patch made in massive, right?..Automate the shit outta that thing, use pitch bends whatever, right?....BOUNCE THAT BITCH!....Duh?!....Here's the kicker: Create another audio track, duplicate that patch, reset it to a basic sine wave, only automating the pitch/volume, BOUNCE THAT BITCH! Don't forget to eq/filter them appropriately. Now you have a sub bass layer following that mid bass layer. Bounce them together and presto! A full audio clip to mess around with and continue resampling with.

If it's at this point you start to do further manipulation via modulation/automation/fx layering and discover some of the bassweight is gone, you can again repeat the process except that instead of starting with synths, you utilize samplers. I have also found that frequency splitting can carry the bassweight over too, but not quite as well as layering a sine wave afterwards does.

cheers.

BTW: The idea of automating the volume of the sub is to give it movement to the midrange rather than a droning/static sub that follows a melody..if you can call it that..

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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by MassAphekt » Wed Aug 08, 2012 3:50 am

Toolman4 wrote:This thread is a typical example of overthinking a topic and making it overcomplicated. ehbrums was right in that adding a sine wave after the resampling process is the best way and that only volume/pitch (I know they both do the same, but for beginners applying that lfo/envelope parameter ;) ) They way to think about it is this:

You create a midi pattern utilizing a bass patch made in massive, right?..Automate the shit outta that thing, use pitch bends whatever, right?....BOUNCE THAT BITCH!....Duh?!....Here's the kicker: Create another audio track, duplicate that patch, reset it to a basic sine wave, only automating the pitch/volume, BOUNCE THAT BITCH! Don't forget to eq/filter them appropriately. Now you have a sub bass layer following that mid bass layer. Bounce them together and presto! A full audio clip to mess around with and continue resampling with.

If it's at this point you start to do further manipulation via modulation/automation/fx layering and discover some of the bassweight is gone, you can again repeat the process except that instead of starting with synths, you utilize samplers. I have also found that frequency splitting can carry the bassweight over too, but not quite as well as layering a sine wave afterwards does.

cheers.

BTW: The idea of automating the volume of the sub is to give it movement to the midrange rather than a droning/static sub that follows a melody..if you can call it that..
this was the most helpful bro, thanks! initially i was avoiding your tactic with all the work of resampling the bass, then creating a duplicate sine, then resampling etc then referring back to where you've cut and pasted your bass. but as you say, replacing with a sine at the end does hold more weight if you were to just solo your low from your processing, given in my case, i think one cycle is good enough for me, I on average love the textures of my initial synths so distortion and such would play a small role in everything else, and I tend to avoid the boring sine note too
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Re: subbass with your resampled basses or apply subbass afte

Post by ehbes » Wed Aug 08, 2012 4:01 am

Toolman4 wrote:ehbrums was right
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