I am trying to get to a low C on the electric basses and I hit the string noises (whatever you call the noises that your fingers make moving across the strings). Why were these put in the low registers for a bass, which you would use, when the high registers are never used anyway? Is it that a real bass doesn't go that low?
Pete
Why were the bass string noises put in the low register??
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- Mod-ulator
- 2895 posts since 31 Oct, 2000 from "Where I'm to, There I'll be"
Exactly
The Low E is the lowest note...
We did let it go to the lowest D though.. So you can do some Lower D Tunings.
We put the string noise to the left of that.
That is the way it has been traditionally done by a few others also.
You can though ...open up the soundsets and remap but then you are stretching the Samples to notes that the original did not have.
Also we sampled the Bass right up to the Highest note on the Bass ...so we do use the high registers.
Also when you are playing it live ... via a controller keyboard, most of the time you are in the lower octaves ... so it puts the string noise close to where you can use it quickly.
The low C on a Bass is up from the lowest E really.
Make sense?
In the future i will map some of the newer sets to go lower for a bit of variation though.
Paul
The Low E is the lowest note...
We did let it go to the lowest D though.. So you can do some Lower D Tunings.
We put the string noise to the left of that.
That is the way it has been traditionally done by a few others also.
You can though ...open up the soundsets and remap but then you are stretching the Samples to notes that the original did not have.
Also we sampled the Bass right up to the Highest note on the Bass ...so we do use the high registers.
Also when you are playing it live ... via a controller keyboard, most of the time you are in the lower octaves ... so it puts the string noise close to where you can use it quickly.
The low C on a Bass is up from the lowest E really.
Make sense?
In the future i will map some of the newer sets to go lower for a bit of variation though.
Paul
-
- Mod-ulator
- 2895 posts since 31 Oct, 2000 from "Where I'm to, There I'll be"

