lo-fi / rugged up processing

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topmo3
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lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by topmo3 » Mon Sep 16, 2013 7:32 pm

what i really want to introduce to my productions (and what i've been trying to do for some time now, in a way) is a certain subtle or sometimes not so subtle lo-fi aesthetic. you know, drum kits that sound like they've been played in the room next door, ghostly, drenched-in-reverb vocals and all sorts of crunches and clicks.

i've done the basic adding of vinyl noise and white noise, cutting low freqs from vocals and treating drum kits with filters but still not quite getting there. so i'd like to ask you what are your fave tricks and tips for getting that warmth and the hip cool lo fi sound..?

i'm using ableton
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by wub » Mon Sep 16, 2013 7:49 pm

Record to tape then record back in. Have a look through Thinking Out Loud, quite a bit of lofi discussion in there.

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topmo3
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by topmo3 » Mon Sep 16, 2013 7:54 pm

cheers man appreciate it but i was thinking more EQing techniques and freeware vst tips
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outbound
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by outbound » Tue Sep 17, 2013 9:34 am

Use Decimort on everything. Fiddle with wet/dry

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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by fragments » Tue Sep 17, 2013 2:04 pm

outbound wrote:Use Decimort on everything. Fiddle with wet/dry

Seriously
Demicort is probably my favorite d16 fx vst.
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by kaili » Tue Sep 17, 2013 4:47 pm

use breaks, specially the shittily recorded ones
lots of saturation
a lot of warmth just comes from leaving the low end in where youd normally cut it out, pretty sure that whats four tet does
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by outbound » Tue Sep 17, 2013 4:57 pm

fragments wrote:
outbound wrote:Use Decimort on everything. Fiddle with wet/dry

Seriously
Demicort is probably my favorite d16 fx vst.
It's so good. When I first used it I was hooked immediately :D
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by fragments » Tue Sep 17, 2013 5:32 pm

outbound wrote:
fragments wrote:
outbound wrote:Use Decimort on everything. Fiddle with wet/dry

Seriously
Demicort is probably my favorite d16 fx vst.
It's so good. When I first used it I was hooked immediately :D
Try it after a reverb. Dirt for days.
SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.

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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by fragments » Tue Sep 17, 2013 7:07 pm

Reel to reel tape will often bump the low mids and round off the highs. So you could play around with EQ and then saturate/distort the upper mids a tad.
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topmo3
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by topmo3 » Thu Sep 19, 2013 7:10 pm

woo thanks mateys :h:

downloaded decimort but now i got a problem with it.. when i quit ableton and later on return to the project, the parameters in the vst are like weirdly turned back up?
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by hudson » Thu Sep 19, 2013 10:37 pm

Use samples from old drum breaks, layer stuff with tape/vinyl noise, leave some of the 200-500Hz range a little muddy, and try compressing and limiting things a little more than you usually would with a nice dirty compressor.

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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by firstboyonthemoon » Fri Sep 20, 2013 3:49 am

Here's an Ableton instrument rack that I use to emulate a poor quality tape. It's based off a YouTube video that someone posted here a while back, though I unfortunately smoke too much to remember who to properly credit.
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by Eat Bass » Tue Sep 24, 2013 4:31 pm

i think a nice way to get the lofo/rugged up sound is to use lots of tape saturation and certain other distortions, sometimes a bit of bit crushing. however, the trick is to set them up via sends or at least with a dry/wet knob on the unit. this way you can mix the dry signal in with the rugged up, this way the production still has it's clean element to it and isn't a muddy mess. controlled chaos is the key.

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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by kaili » Wed Sep 25, 2013 4:47 pm

Eat Bass wrote:i think a nice way to get the lofo/rugged up sound is to use lots of tape saturation and certain other distortions, sometimes a bit of bit crushing. however, the trick is to set them up via sends or at least with a dry/wet knob on the unit. this way you can mix the dry signal in with the rugged up, this way the production still has it's clean element to it and isn't a muddy mess. controlled chaos is the key.
you could always do parallel distortion/saturation instead too :)
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topmo3
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by topmo3 » Wed Sep 25, 2013 6:09 pm

kaili wrote:
Eat Bass wrote:i think a nice way to get the lofo/rugged up sound is to use lots of tape saturation and certain other distortions, sometimes a bit of bit crushing. however, the trick is to set them up via sends or at least with a dry/wet knob on the unit. this way you can mix the dry signal in with the rugged up, this way the production still has it's clean element to it and isn't a muddy mess. controlled chaos is the key.
you could always do parallel distortion/saturation instead too :)
yo wot is dis
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by kaili » Wed Sep 25, 2013 6:37 pm

topmo3 wrote:
kaili wrote:
Eat Bass wrote:i think a nice way to get the lofo/rugged up sound is to use lots of tape saturation and certain other distortions, sometimes a bit of bit crushing. however, the trick is to set them up via sends or at least with a dry/wet knob on the unit. this way you can mix the dry signal in with the rugged up, this way the production still has it's clean element to it and isn't a muddy mess. controlled chaos is the key.
you could always do parallel distortion/saturation instead too :)
yo wot is dis
ive never done it on drums before myself, but i guess it would have similar effects to what eat bass said. you just get a distorted copy of the drum track and layer it underneath the original. obviously youd have it quieter and maybe youd EQ it differently
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by Eat Bass » Wed Sep 25, 2013 10:51 pm

What I said is parallel distortion.

Snd yeah it works good on any element you want to rough up. I use parallel processing quite frequently. Idk how I lived without it for about a year lol.

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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by kaili » Wed Sep 25, 2013 10:53 pm

Eat Bass wrote:What I said is parallel distortion.

Snd yeah it works good on any element you want to rough up. I use parallel processing quite frequently. Idk how I lived without it for about a year lol.
yeah i guess the way you said is just a different way of doing it, i think its better to double trakc imo tho
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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by Eat Bass » Wed Sep 25, 2013 10:57 pm

kaili wrote:
Eat Bass wrote:What I said is parallel distortion.

Snd yeah it works good on any element you want to rough up. I use parallel processing quite frequently. Idk how I lived without it for about a year lol.
yeah i guess the way you said is just a different way of doing it, i think its better to double trakc imo tho
A send is the same thing just saves time for me. I think this way is actually the most common way for parallel processing, not necessarily duplicate tracks.

And you have more control because depending on how much you crank the send to the parallel distortion bus you can get different results or the same if you keep it at 0db.

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Re: lo-fi / rugged up processing

Post by nowaysj » Sat Oct 12, 2013 10:05 am

Typed out a long one here, dsf glitched out on me, er you.

Bottom line: begin experimenting. The sound you want is not cheep in terms of personal investment.
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