i love these tips thanks! i personally love a wee bit of grit in my pads, bit reduction, saturation etc.hasezwei wrote:might b that cheesy pads are easy to make but really really great pads aren't.
i can spend hours working on them, layering, saturating, filtering... i listen to a lot of shoegaze-y ambient guitar stuff, so i tend to distort my pads or run them through a guitar amp, then layer them with granulated foley sounds or field recordings that have delays or sublte sidechaining on them to add extra movement, and automate everything subtly to have it ebb and flow with the track.
but that's just my specific approach (at least one thing where i feel like i've found my style...) and i haven't really gotten good results in the vein of classic jungle/'intelligent dnb' tunes, so i'm lookin forward to your tips, legend4ry!
I also like to convert shitty pad sounds to audio, timestretch or pitch them down, chop them up, overcompress and reverse them, flanger/phaser etc. makes a cheesy pad sound into something a lot more interesting