Every age has its "sound". I suppose that Ultravox track would be uninteresting & forgettable to ancient Romans.
Software and hardware are easy part, but understanding your time and reflecting it in music...
Where can I hear the Sisters covers?BONES wrote: Thu Mar 27, 2025 12:15 am Definitely not one of my favourite Ultravox songs and I don't think it ever charted here. Mind you, I don't like Vienna either, because it re-uses a riff from Maximum Acceleration, from their previous album, which is just lazy. We had a cover of Sleepwalk on our third album and we'll have The Man Who Dies Every Day on our new one. Also, I do All Stood Still, The Voice and I Remember (Death in the Afternoon), as well as John Foxx's Underpass, in my 80s side-project, which means Ultravox are now neck-and-neck with The Sisters of Mercy as my most covered bands (Alice, Temple of Love, Dominion, Body Electric, Lucretia My Reflection and the Sisterhood's Giving Ground). To keep it on topic, only Temple of Love and Dominion were done with hardware, the rest were 100% ITB, so software wins 10 to 2!
This stement tells me that you don´t have that much experience with layering. But you know what - I´m too old and educated to debate about terms. You´re not wrong. OK. But what people do with layering is very often more a part of the production process than dedicated sound design.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 when hardware synths could only play one timbre and didn't have MIDI, or when we didn't have DAWs that could layer instrumentsHAL76 wrote: Sun Mar 23, 2025 7:51 pm It's really stupid that people will still be arguing about their words in 2025.
I didn't read everything, but it was apparently also about layering... and that was initially a production technique that was also taken up in the later upcoming discipline of sound design.
And the protagonists are by no means talking about the same thing when they rave about it.
It's amazing that people are arguing that layering two sounds together to make a new sound is anything but sound design
[/quote]BONES wrote: Mon Mar 24, 2025 12:31 amIvyBirds wrote: Sun Mar 23, 2025 3:33 amI recently watched Rick Beato's interview with Hans Zimmer and I noticed something very interesting - he never uses the term "sound design", he always calls it what it is - synth programming. Sound Design is a completely different discipline that requires a much higher level of skill. Programming synths is something anyone can do if they can be bothered, like taking out the bins. Hans actually thinks it's the thing he is best at (programming synths, not taking out the bins) but he doesn't try to tart it up with some fancy name.HAL76 wrote: Sun Mar 23, 2025 7:51 pmI didn't read everything, but it was apparently also about layering... and that was initially a production technique that was also taken up in the later upcoming discipline of sound design.
You are right I have only been doing it since 1984.HAL76 wrote: Wed Apr 02, 2025 7:37 pmThis stement tells me that you don´t have that much experience with layering. But you know what - I´m too old and educated to debate about terms. You´re not wrong. OK. But what people do with layering is very often more a part of the production process than dedicated sound design.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 when hardware synths could only play one timbre and didn't have MIDI, or when we didn't have DAWs that could layer instrumentsHAL76 wrote: Sun Mar 23, 2025 7:51 pm It's really stupid that people will still be arguing about their words in 2025.
I didn't read everything, but it was apparently also about layering... and that was initially a production technique that was also taken up in the later upcoming discipline of sound design.
And the protagonists are by no means talking about the same thing when they rave about it.
It's amazing that people are arguing that layering two sounds together to make a new sound is anything but sound design
Just think of two perfectly matching different phrases that complement each other in a way that you may not even suspect it´s different sounds if you don´t listen really close. Or variations in just one of the two phrases. That´s all closer to the term production technique than sound design - just because it´s not only about the sound.
Layering is much more than sound design. It can really generate "sense" if you use it within a track.
That's only true if the term doesn't already have a widely accepted definition and Sound Design is a very different discipline/skillset from what it gets used to describe around here. It has it's own Wikipedia page and there is a category at the Oscars for excellence in that field. For people around here to call themselves "sound designers" because they can be bothered spending time making patches for synths, just to make themselves feel a little bit important, is equal parts sad and laughable.HAL76 wrote: Wed Apr 02, 2025 7:45 pmI think the point is that nobody has the power of definition to define the term in an undisputable way (for allt times).
So if use a synth like the Minimoog that has a mixer section and you use it to mix the sound of the three oscillators, are you engaging in the practice of synth programming to design a new sound which people on a forum such as this, not related to film scores, often refer to as sound design?
then theyd have nothing to argue about and would have to use their time doing something elsejustin3am wrote: Thu Apr 03, 2025 12:11 am I think we can take context into account when we discuss these kinds of things. It doesn't hurt to be a little generous in interpretation.
What is this strange Earth custom of "making music"of which you speak?vurt wrote: Thu Apr 03, 2025 12:20 amthen theyd have nothing to argue about and would have to use their time doing something elsejustin3am wrote: Thu Apr 03, 2025 12:11 am I think we can take context into account when we discuss these kinds of things. It doesn't hurt to be a little generous in interpretation.
maybe music?
FFS, the answer is in the name. Look at The Legend's GUI, the section is labelled "MIXER". You are mixing the oscillator outputs. It's the same with an arrangement - you create all the tracks and then you mix the output of the individual tracks together. The result is also called a "mix". That's why we call it "mixing", not layering and as sure as shit not sound design, although sound design will inevitably involve mixing most of the time.IvyBirds wrote: Wed Apr 02, 2025 11:46 pmSo if use a synth like the Minimoog that has a mixer section and you use it to mix the sound of the three oscillators, are you engaging in the practice of synth programming to design a new sound which people on a forum such as this, not related to film scores, often refer to as sound design?Or is it a production technique?
Not really. It requires similar skills and a good ear. e.g. On a new song we created last week, we chose to use a filter effect on one of the synth parts, rather than automate the instrument's own filter. We could have done it either way because, ultimately the processes and knowledge/skills required are exactly the f**king same. I think we did it that way simply because we were keen to play around with Filtron, to see what it had to offer.There is a giant difference between mixing tracks and layering synths while engaging in the practice of synth programming to design a new sound
Yes, in a pathetic attempt to give it some totally undeserved credibility. Doesn't make them right.which people on a forum such as this, not related to film scores, often refer to as sound design.
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