shakermaker!

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I've NOT had a chance to go thru all 41.... and there have been some really nice ones that I have tested(!!!)
That said- I was not expected to be taken with Shakermaker.
The trick is simple as to what it does: it makes anything you send thru it sound like a "shaker" instrument. That simple description alone does not do it justice and exactly how it does that... that may NOT be as easy to explain! Regardless, I felt compelled to bring some attention to this little dealie :hihi:
I've created a couple of examples to illustrate what can easily be done in 10mins or less.
this example is 4 drumloops cut (roughly) together so that they're changing from one to the next and back again, etc. First, dry and then I toggled the Shakermaker effect off and on. I have not even tweaked the first preset on the effect. You can get all sorts of effects "within the shaker neighborhood" depending on the input you feed it and your Shakermaker settings 8)
this second example,
drumular loop (thru another cool DC challenge entry: compressive)
the same 4 loops running thru a tweak of a Shakermaker preset
and the obligatory Lazysnake thru one instance of de la mancha's truc 8)
not that this is an elaborate illustration, but that is the point: it might *sound* like I took pains in creating the shaker rhythms, but it's really just the (roughly cut) 4 drum loops that are driving shakermaker.

Really nice one, Musicrow! :tu:

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:)

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hahaha... excellent plug!!!... very fun!

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Very cool sounding demos, blortblort.
looza wrote:I am sometimes very bored by hihats and tend to use shakers instead...just the fact that I am able to convert all my hihat-lines to shaker-lines in the future makes me dribble.
+1 dribbler.

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howdy, Mr sled! glad ya like... I really dig the shakermaker :hihi:

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More dididididle, please.

All in the name of bumping shakermaker of course.

:wink:

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Hi,
I created ShakerMaker. The idea that makes it work is actualy very simple:
It makes no use of samples, of course. The signal is passing through an envelope follower. Then a noise generator gets its amplitude from the envelope follower. Changing the EF attack and release will make the shaker softer of harder. The tricky thing is a noise generator that don't produce the simple white or pink noise but more interesting noises- for more interesting shaker sounds.
I am glad you like it!

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Thanks again, kirkagur!
great fun and useful tool :tu:

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