Reasons to resample a reese bass;Sure_Fire wrote:I don't get why people think resampling is the only way to get gnarly reeses. The only use for resampling I can think of (besides keeping CPU low) is to thicken up the sound (via layering), which is better done by making decent patches and using saturators/exciters. It's not gonna sound thick if the harmonics just aren't there to begin with. The end result is just resonant harmonics piling on each other making the sound harsh rather than thick.
1. Allows you to stretch or squish the original sound for nasty distorted sounds
2. Allows easier layering, chopping, reversing, or fading of the sound
3. Eliminates all phase issues that using midi creates, which, on a side note, is a great reason as to why your whole track should be in audio upon completion (you want it to sound the same every time you listen to it as opposed to slightly different every time)
4. Easier on CPU
5. For more intricate work, your sample can be loaded into a sampler such as kontakt, absynthe, or your DAW's local sampler for repitching, stretching, pitch bending, filtering, etc. etc. etc.
Granted you have a point, make sure your INITIAL SOUND is as well done as it can possibly be, but if you're not resampling, you're HEAVILY limiting yourself (no pun intended)