Who gives a dam about Bill after all he is no geek so just leave it alone
Gates
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- KVRist
- 335 posts since 15 Mar, 2004
Who gives a dam about Bill after all he is no geek so just leave it alone
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Ben [Camel Audio] Ben [Camel Audio] https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=1122
- KVRian
- 757 posts since 18 Sep, 2001 from Edinburgh, Scotland
We're going to be announcing a bundle deal shortly. If you go to our shop and click to buy the PhatSpace bundle, it will then offer you Cameleon at 25% off. So you can get everything for $299, a saving of around 25% on the cost if brought separately.i did notice your product...but as i'm actually keen to get my hands on all 3 of ur products i'm kinda hoping for a group buy or just waiting on a package deal of some sort
Ben
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- KVRist
- 476 posts since 28 Jun, 2002 from Vancouver, Canada
Hi Ben,
A little OT, but ... I bought CamelSpace the other day, on the strength of playing with the demo for about 2 minutes. Very cool.
I tried the C5000 demo again for the first time since last year, but it still really didn't do anything for me. I was hoping that I could resynthesize more complex sounds. Really I'm looking for a tool that can take a sinle hit and transpose it effortlessly, and I thought additive resynthesis might help me do this. However, it seems I'm lacking detail, which probably means I'm lacking enough partials to get a good representation of the original sound.
Is there some sort of offline process that you know of that will do this at much higher resolution and spit out a multi-sample of the input? I don't care about real-time resynthesis that much. If I can get it to synthesize a multi-sample of the input source, that would be good enough for me.
So, if you know of something, of even have something like that in development or perhaps internally, I'd love to know.
Thanks,
~MacQ
A little OT, but ... I bought CamelSpace the other day, on the strength of playing with the demo for about 2 minutes. Very cool.
I tried the C5000 demo again for the first time since last year, but it still really didn't do anything for me. I was hoping that I could resynthesize more complex sounds. Really I'm looking for a tool that can take a sinle hit and transpose it effortlessly, and I thought additive resynthesis might help me do this. However, it seems I'm lacking detail, which probably means I'm lacking enough partials to get a good representation of the original sound.
Is there some sort of offline process that you know of that will do this at much higher resolution and spit out a multi-sample of the input? I don't care about real-time resynthesis that much. If I can get it to synthesize a multi-sample of the input source, that would be good enough for me.
So, if you know of something, of even have something like that in development or perhaps internally, I'd love to know.
Thanks,
~MacQ
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Ben [Camel Audio] Ben [Camel Audio] https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=1122
- KVRian
- 757 posts since 18 Sep, 2001 from Edinburgh, Scotland
A little OT, but ... I bought CamelSpace the other day, on the strength of playing with the demo for about 2 minutes. Very cool.
If you want to transpose a hit with maximum quality, then breaking the sound down into an editable form is unnecessary. You might be better of with something like Rephraze of Melodyne.Really I'm looking for a tool that can take a sinle hit and transpose it effortlessly, and I thought additive resynthesis might help me do this.
Now that would be tellingSo, if you know of something, of even have something like that in development or perhaps internally, I'd love to know.
Ben
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- KVRist
- 476 posts since 28 Jun, 2002 from Vancouver, Canada
What's the matter Ben? Not feeling magnanimous today?Ben [Camel Audio] wrote: Now that would be telling![]()
Thanks for your help!
~MacQ
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Ben [Camel Audio] Ben [Camel Audio] https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=1122
- KVRian
- 757 posts since 18 Sep, 2001 from Edinburgh, Scotland
Just back from checking my dictionaryWhat's the matter Ben? Not feeling magnanimous today?
Ben
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- KVRist
- 476 posts since 28 Jun, 2002 from Vancouver, Canada
Hehe ... yes. I was just playing around with you. No worries. I appreciated your responses, and I'm looking into them. I was using magnanimous in the "overly generous" sense. 'sall good.
~MacQ
~MacQ
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- KVRAF
- 3002 posts since 24 Nov, 2003 from Heidelberg&Hamburg
only now found this...you m-m-ma-dddddd m-m-m-y dddd-a-yC00kie wrote:A regular noise gate acts like somebody's pressing the "mute" button if the signal level is below a certain threshold.
Trance gates (brrrggghh!!) d-d-do st-st-stut-t-ttt-ter on the beat (each 16th or 32th note)
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- KVRist
- 335 posts since 15 Mar, 2004
Did this make any sense to anyone???bill fusion wrote:![]()
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Who gives a dam about Bill after all he is no geek so just leave it alone
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