It's where he comes back with an accusation of an error regardless of any response, and in effect adds a new 'layer' to the argument, in HIS mind, and thus perpetuating the argument for its own sake, like a gnat trapped in the folds of a camels sphincter.
Software vs Hardware
- KVRAF
- 13980 posts since 19 Jun, 2008 from Seattle
I'm not a musician, but I've designed sounds that others use to make music. http://soundcloud.com/obsidiananvil
- Suspended
- 17890 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
Yes, that's what I said.
Nobody said he did, that's just you going off on a tangent that didn't exist until you created it. Learn to read what's actually written, FFS.He didn't say anything about there being a difference or that one word had a diff meaning to another.
No, I wasn't. I made a simple observation, the rest of it is all of your invention.You are putting words into his mouth.
Exactly, although I tend to call mine "patches", to differentiate them from the "presets" that come with the instrument. If you watch the credits for any film or TV programme, you will see that there is usually someone credited with "Sound Design". That's not the person who programs the synths, it's a far more complex and involved job than that, probably as important as the composer.I just call it 'making presets' because that's what I do. I make a sound, and save it as a preset.
As I said, it goes back way further than that, to the first time someone thought of adding a second violin to an ensemble so it could be heard over the other instruments. That's what makes orchestral music so powerful, the sheer scale of the sound. They just kept adding (p)layers until it started to become overwhelming. (See what I did there?)IvyBirds wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 6:11 amIt's always been used as a sound design tool, it's just technology makes it easier now than back in the day
I call that "mixing", as would most people, I think. To give it the opposite perspective to your earlier comment, I'd suggest that layering is far less useful/necessary these days than it once was, simply because of the tools we have available to make any individual timbre do whatever job we want or need it to. e.g. In the 1970s and '80s, if you wanted to get a big, fat bassline it was often necessary to layer two or more synths to get the sound you were after but these days, there are so many effects you can add to enhance the sound any way you can think of, that you should hardly ever need to layer multiple synths to get the job done.IvyBirds wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 6:11 amIt's amazing that people are arguing that layering two sounds together to make a new sound is anything but sound design
I remember my first mixer, a Boss thing, had three band fixed EQ, which was amazing, except it only went to +/- 4dB (or maybe 6, it was a long time ago). That meant if the bottom end of your bass synth wasn't there, you weren't going to get much out of it using EQ. And if the bottom end was too much, you couldn't do much to tame it with EQ, either, so you'd layer it with another sound to get the balance you needed. The trouble then, of course, was that if two of my synths were going to do the bassline, it didn't leave me much to fill out the arrangement, so I worked hard to make every instrument do what I needed without having to layer anything. By the time I had all the parts I could possibly need, probably by the time I had an ESQ-M, it had become habit so I've never really used layering for anything. Even though we tend to use two or three basslines in our songs, they are never playing the same thing, so I don't see it as layering in the traditional sense. To me it's mixing.
You could argue that it's true of any synth with more than one oscillator, or even single osc synths like the Roland Juno, which layers the different waveforms. But that's not what we mean when we talk about layering, is it? To me, layering is two separate instruments playing the same part. The exception to that might be layering drum sounds within an instrument like Battery, which we do fairly regularly.Jac459 wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 8:40 amThere is even advanced layering sound design with "vector" synths which are mixing various sound sources and changing the volumes of each. The Moog Animoog Z is a notable example, we could also talk about a few Rob Papen ones.
I think intellectual exercises like this have their place. How often do you see people doing something a particular way because that's how it was done 40 or 50 years ago, rather than using all the tools at our disposal today to do it more efficiently/effectively?sin night wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 1:00 pmI see no benefit in “intellectual exercises” like this… what matters using a technique when it’s appropriate to get the results, anything else is a waste of time and a distraction from making music, imho.
Bullshit. Take the case out of the cupboard, open the case, remove the instrument, check the tuning (or the reed or whatever), then get the correct grip/posture all organised and then you can think about playing. By that time, I'm half-way through a song on my PC but, with any luck, you might be ready to contribute to the second chorus.felis wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 12:57 amAcoustic instruments. No need to turn on, no need for electricity, just play.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
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- KVRian
- 659 posts since 29 Feb, 2004 from Toronto
If your instrument is in its case, in a cupboard no less, you are doing it wrong or don't care that much. Takes me as long to walk into a room and sit as it does you. I reach and grasp an instrument while at the same time putting it where it needs to be. Now I'm playing. If you are doing it right your position and playing have started before you get in the room. Some people are just not musicians or artists (at the soul level) and that's you BONES. But man you do take the bait and run 
Reverbnation
see ya 'round...
see ya 'round...
- KVRAF
- 4066 posts since 3 Jul, 2022
Definitely. It is just that here it doesn't s kind of more advanced as you get an easy way to do a lot of variations in the mix (which would be possible to be done without though).BONES wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 1:22 amYou could argue that it's true of any synth with more than one oscillator, or even single osc synths like the Roland Juno, which layers the different waveforms.Jac459 wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 8:40 amThere is even advanced layering sound design with "vector" synths which are mixing various sound sources and changing the volumes of each. The Moog Animoog Z is a notable example, we could also talk about a few Rob Papen ones.
Agreed also. A very straight forward sound design technique I use with Bitwig is to put 2 VSTs in a Bitwig instrument container and use an XY controller to modulate the respective volumes and other things (decays, cut-offs...).But that's not what we mean when we talk about layering, is it? To me, layering is two separate instruments playing the same part.
Generally I put a slight OTT in the container in order to really glue the sounds as one.
Another derivative of this technique is to use one sound as the attack (like a mallet) and have another sound with a slight midi delay playing after to be the body of the sound after the 1st instrument.
- KVRAF
- 4066 posts since 3 Jul, 2022
I think you are answering seriously to what was just a joke.Morgaxx wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 1:45 am If your instrument is in its case, in a cupboard no less, you are doing it wrong or don't care that much. Takes me as long to walk into a room and sit as it does you. I reach and grasp an instrument while at the same time putting it where it needs to be. Now I'm playing. If you are doing it right your position and playing have started before you get in the room. Some people are just not musicians or artists (at the soul level) and that's you BONES. But man you do take the bait and run![]()
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- KVRian
- 659 posts since 29 Feb, 2004 from Toronto
Thanks, but I am aware of BONES way. That's why I responded with something funny for him.Jac459 wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 2:00 amI think you are answering seriously to what was just a joke.Morgaxx wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 1:45 am If your instrument is in its case, in a cupboard no less, you are doing it wrong or don't care that much. Takes me as long to walk into a room and sit as it does you. I reach and grasp an instrument while at the same time putting it where it needs to be. Now I'm playing. If you are doing it right your position and playing have started before you get in the room. Some people are just not musicians or artists (at the soul level) and that's you BONES. But man you do take the bait and run![]()
Reverbnation
see ya 'round...
see ya 'round...
- KVRAF
- 4066 posts since 3 Jul, 2022
Ok, I let you both have fun then.Morgaxx wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 3:07 amThanks, but I am aware of BONES way. That's why I responded with something funny for him.Jac459 wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 2:00 amI think you are answering seriously to what was just a joke.Morgaxx wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 1:45 am If your instrument is in its case, in a cupboard no less, you are doing it wrong or don't care that much. Takes me as long to walk into a room and sit as it does you. I reach and grasp an instrument while at the same time putting it where it needs to be. Now I'm playing. If you are doing it right your position and playing have started before you get in the room. Some people are just not musicians or artists (at the soul level) and that's you BONES. But man you do take the bait and run![]()
- KVRAF
- 2473 posts since 25 Sep, 2014 from Specific Northwest
What was this thread about again?
I started on Logic 5 with a PowerBook G4 550Mhz. I now have a MacBook Air M1 and it's ~165x faster! So, why is my music not proportionally better? 
- addled muppet weed
- 111327 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
- KVRAF
- 2473 posts since 25 Sep, 2014 from Specific Northwest
Damn! I hate when I miss an episode. It's that toasters as in makers of hot, tasty bread products, or as in Jamaican rappers?
Both are fine with me, actually...
I started on Logic 5 with a PowerBook G4 550Mhz. I now have a MacBook Air M1 and it's ~165x faster! So, why is my music not proportionally better? 
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- KVRian
- 1207 posts since 2 Oct, 2021
Episode? Now I might have missed a thing...syntonica wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 10:25 pmDamn! I hate when I miss an episode. It's that toasters as in makers of hot, tasty bread products, or as in Jamaican rappers?
Both are fine with me, actually...
I was quoting the movie with Robert Redford.
ABX is enemy to GAS
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 281 posts since 4 Apr, 2014
sin night wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 1:00 pm Honestly, I don’t give a f**k (to put it a gentle and educated way) if it’s sound design, production or arrangement (or anything else). I only care for the actual result.
I see no benefit in “intellectual exercises” like this… what matters using a technique when it’s appropriate to get the results, anything else is a waste of time and a distraction from making music, imho.
I guess that's it!
People either remember the track, or not. There's music I really don't like, but if I remember it, they must be doing something right
Music is not that different from literature, painting etc. It needs to provide a sense of meaning (information) in order to be remembered.
Even the most stupid dance track is memorable to people who like to dance. To them, it simply means: DANCE!
But doing some theory is not bad, it gives you more choices. You can figure out what to say, and how to say it...
- Suspended
- 17890 posts since 14 Jun, 2001 from Somewhere you're not!
Ultravox used to do something similar. According to an interview I read 30+ years ago, they used to layer a harpsichord sound over their strings to give them a punchy attack. I've never really tried to listen for it and I've never noticed it, either, but apparently it is there. I can't remember which record they'd have been talking about.Jac459 wrote: Tue Mar 25, 2025 1:59 amAnother derivative of this technique is to use one sound as the attack (like a mallet) and have another sound with a slight midi delay playing after to be the body of the sound after the 1st instrument.
NOVAkILL : Legion GO, AMD Z1x, 16GB RAM, Win11 | Audient EVO 8 | Lumi Keys | Studio Pro 8
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
Korg Odyssey, bx-oberhausen, Proxima, PolyMax, GR8, JP6K, Union, Atomika,
Invader 2, Flow Motion, Olga, TRK 01, Thorn, Spire, VG Iron
