U-he's Zebra tutorials are useful... but

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Are there any other tutorials that I can use to help understand "how to make these sounds"?
Nowadays there are too many wavetable synth tutorials (thanks to Serum and Massive) that are not quite capable of replicating them in Zebra.

I want to learn how to make lot of trance-edm like sounds, as well as house synths. Mostly anything other than dubstep like sound.

Any advice or links will be helpful.

Thanks!

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It's not something specific to the Zebra, or generally u-he tutorials, but i think there is a serious lack of "how to do that sound" tutorials. Not sure why that is, i never really got it. As someone who starts out messing with synths, you want to (quickly) know how to make this or that sound specifically. I never really dissected patches much (many ways lead to Rome anyway), so i stumbled on most things i learned about synthesis over the years rather by accident, which of course is also a way of learning it, but takes so much longer, and also is a bit random at times. I actually thought about doing some "how to do that sound" Youtube tutorials, although i'm really not very experience in making sound compared to others, just because it's something which i feel is seriously lacking. There are literally thousands of tuts which cover the basics of subtractive synthesis, or how the different synths work, but only very few sound tutorials. Sadly, because even on this forum people often asked how to make this or that sound, even if they're pretty basic.

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One thing I find helpful at times is to try to replicate a patch on one synth with another. It kind of forces you to explore the capabilities of both synths. Find a patch that you like in Massive (or whatever) and start to put that thing together in Zebra. Of course, Zebra eclipses Serum and Massive in some ways, but falls short in others.

Zebra, to me, is an excellent but largely untapped resource. I like to find a preset patch (there are tons of great ones) and explore messing with it, but I don't find it that fun to patch up. Part of that stems from the UI lacking visual cues as to how modulators are connected or how they can even be connected. Even though I know it now, I tend to go to other synths for stuff, even though I know what I'm looking for is well within Zebra's wheelhouse.

I recently sold ACE and Diva with part of my reasoning that I'm already using a DSP based modular for things that ACE is good for and actual analogs for what Diva is good for and it'll force me to dig into Zebra/HZ deeper and become more intimate with it.
Zerocrossing Media

4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~

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zerocrossing wrote:One thing I find helpful at times is to try to replicate a patch on one synth with another. It kind of forces you to explore the capabilities of both synths.
I strongly agree with this. Also, nothing can replace those "Aha!" moments you get when you discover it yourself. With all that said...

I like the stuff Rolf is covering in the Bazille videos. http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic ... 1&t=449861 Check all of them if you have time.

And I think Nick's tutorials covering Sampler and Operator in Live are really good. The vast majority of the stuff he covers transfers well, imho.
http://nickstutorials.com/

Both of these back into sound design in different ways. As always, ymmv...

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Computer Music magazine usually has several step by step preset making tutorials in every issue. They're not necessarily videos but they can still be helpful.

They use lots of different synths and not just u-he though.

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ADSR Sounds had a series of free tutorials as well as a few paid courses that explored Zebra for building specific sounds. The presenter also experiments a lot in videos and gives a good idea on how each parameter affects the final sound. Those videos have certain presentation style that may not work for everyone so check the free/sample videos from the series first.

The majority of other videos ether just describe the controls in general or give very precise recipes with numbers for each control without much explanation. In the end, one is left to take an existing patch, dissect it, and experiment. General subtractive, additive, and FM synthesis courses are very good to build a foundation before you start experimenting with Zebra.

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Well, reading these posts I thought it might be a good idea to start a series of Zebra-patch analysis. The first part is online now. Please tell me, if it is something like that, you are looking for:

Have a great day and a good time!
Rolf
Rolf Kasten
http://www.rofilm-media.net
Instagram: @rofilmmedia

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Try ADSR Music Productions on YouTube:

Windows 7, Cubase 9.5 and some extra plug-ins | Takamine EN-10C and PRS Mira

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rofilm wrote:Well, reading these posts I thought it might be a good idea to start a series of Zebra-patch analysis. The first part is online now. Please tell me, if it is something like that, you are looking for:

Have a great day and a good time!
Rolf
Highly recommended...based on Rolf's previous work with U-He's Bazille. Looking forward to more Zebra tutorials in the future.

:tu:
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