A sound is a sound, it is not "warm".fluffy_little_something wrote:And if you simply don't find different sounds warm or cold or sharp or whatever to begin with, maybe you have cognitive issues
If it is, then define its temperature in C or F.
My understanding of "warm" as used and meant by people in audio and synth context: rich in low and mid frequencies, with fairly even frequency spectrum curve without any bigger spikes and rolling off smoothly at the high end, possibly sligthly overdriven (real analogs which we often describe with that word, naturally overdrive the sound at different stages).
But someone else may have a different definition of "warm".
And a sound is not "snappy", but has short attack and decay and low sustain, while the main volume is set to sub max level (that is one of the definitions i got from reading that "snappiest envelopes" thread).
But someone else may have a different definition of "snappy".
Would be much easier to communicate here if no one used all those vague or even sometimes meaningless words.
This is why i don't use these words.
