Hi,
I just made this tonight it is an acoustic guitar. Jasmine by Takamine.
http://www.christianradio.me.uk/freedow ... mine.sfArk - 5 meg file
good for A, C , D , E , G scales.
Thanks. God Bless.
Aaron.
A new soundfont to add to your collection.
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aaroncavanaugh2 aaroncavanaugh2 https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=46091
- KVRist
- 131 posts since 28 Oct, 2004
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- KVRAF
- 3002 posts since 24 Nov, 2003 from Heidelberg&Hamburg
thanks for sharing! Just downloading. As I try to play my guitar-parts myself, I'm more interested how you make your soundfonts, but for this it will be a good learning too
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- KVRAF
- 3139 posts since 6 Sep, 2002 from United Kingdom & Opinions Will Travel :O)
I downloaded it – it works as a strum font, you have created a recording of a chord strum and have it play across the keys, you got different presets for different cords – it’s a start and some of the strums are cool – others feel out of tune, so might be worth playing it back and re-do those waves.
How did you compile the font? you may be able to set a key range that forces the user to play only in an acceptable area the sample can cope with, as its only one sample per preset, mono pair, spreading over all the keys atm. The waves feel like they have been recorded via a cheap electric pick-up (or mic) due to the hiss increase towards the end of the lower samples. This is something you may be able to reduce further with careful mike placement – or lower gain control, then normalise a bit. Noise reduction programs don’t work too well on guitar samples if trying to eradicate too much noise as they leave a harmonic trace in its place that sounds worse.
Best regards,
Spe3d
:O)
How did you compile the font? you may be able to set a key range that forces the user to play only in an acceptable area the sample can cope with, as its only one sample per preset, mono pair, spreading over all the keys atm. The waves feel like they have been recorded via a cheap electric pick-up (or mic) due to the hiss increase towards the end of the lower samples. This is something you may be able to reduce further with careful mike placement – or lower gain control, then normalise a bit. Noise reduction programs don’t work too well on guitar samples if trying to eradicate too much noise as they leave a harmonic trace in its place that sounds worse.
Best regards,
Spe3d
:O)
