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Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2008 12:04 am
by skywalker0
This is gonna be a stupid question and i will probably get rinsed for it...
But what kind of program would you use to do this? Im really intrigued to try it for myself but wouldnt have a clue where to start lol!
Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2008 12:05 am
by skywalker0
Ignore that.. i just found the entire section on production.. D'oh!
Posted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 8:51 am
by deejay
Skywalker0 wrote:Ignore that.. i just found the entire section on production.. D'oh!
Haha....I figure this is a perfect time for me to jump on in here as well. You see I'm new to this as well and sometimes we tend to overlook the obvious, kinda like you did here. I do the same thing sometimes and am fascinated, still to this day, about the power of forums like this one. I personally found that the tutorial helped me to see a new path. I love Dubstep but it's still really new to me. This tutorial actually broke me out of a spell..and I made a really good song cause of it..well....you get the point. Being new to this type of software, I watched the tutorial and the next thing I knew I was inspired. We all may be at different levels but we're all in for the same cause. I respect people who don't hate on the noob. Thanks for the tutorial...it really helped....me.
Btw....I'm using reason 4 and ableton 6

Posted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 8:02 pm
by thesynthesist
Thanks for speaking your mind deejay, i really appreciate the positive feedback... It makes it worthwhile to know that it helped you out, cuz we've all been in that stuck funk before... Just glad you found it useful, and that it could serve as a springboard for you, thats exactly what i was hoping for!
Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:25 am
by myrkur
Nice vid and tutorial, liking the tunes in the intros and outros too, that Dyin' Time tune on your myspace is great
Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2008 10:26 am
by myrkur
Nice vid and tutorial, liking the tunes in the intros and outros too, that Dyin' Time tune on your myspace is great
what its all about...
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2008 12:48 pm
by slva
deejay wrote:Skywalker0 wrote:Ignore that.. i just found the entire section on production.. D'oh!
Haha....I figure this is a perfect time for me to jump on in here as well. You see I'm new to this as well and sometimes we tend to overlook the obvious, kinda like you did here. I do the same thing sometimes and am fascinated, still to this day, about the power of forums like this one. I personally found that the tutorial helped me to see a new path. I love Dubstep but it's still really new to me. This tutorial actually broke me out of a spell..and I made a really good song cause of it..well....you get the point. Being new to this type of software, I watched the tutorial and the next thing I knew I was inspired. We all may be at different levels but we're all in for the same cause. I respect people who don't hate on the noob. Thanks for the tutorial...it really helped....me.
Btw....I'm using reason 4 and ableton 6

big up the positive threads. demystifying techy stuff and spreading some love around the forum can only result in one thing... better produced dubstep down the line and a tighter community / forum. Jumping in with the ego-sarcasm kills threads, where as in this case Synthesist picked up new adds and respect on his Myspace and hits to his website. It's what I loved about this forum when I first found it over a year ago, it's kinda special place, especially the production forum

Its what music is all about.
Re: Dubstep Wobble Tutorial vid...
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2008 1:33 pm
by dokie
Hello all -- kinda new to the forum (even though i registered a while ago and not posted?),
I dont normally post on the forum, not that i do not want to take part in discussions, its just that the level of technical detail sometimes blows me into confusion.
thesynthesist wrote:Finished it a bit later than expected but here it is...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZYDmw2pYOk
Its laid out in MASSIVE, with some patches to demonstrate the concepts...
Hope you guys like it...
Dont shit on me in the comments, please!!?! haha
btw, i posted this in the production forum Wobble sticky, but thought it might find some interest here too...
I think that thesynthesist has created a base for people to expand on, im not a keen producer myself, i just enjoy reading and trying new things with music. I mean -- if someone can understand the basic concept of this, im sure they can take most VST's with a assignable LFO and a filter to make new sounds. I understand that some people are saying if you outline a method, all the scene will sound the same and the unique quality of the sound created goes out the window.
This is my opinion, but i understand if someone has different to say!
Thank you for creating this thesynthesist and ill look foward to watching further tutorials in the future, and listening to your creations!
Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2008 8:29 pm
by thesynthesist
Thanks for the positive feelings everyone... So glad that this is well-received, Ive gotten more hits on the Youtube page than i would have thought, over 2000 in 10 days! nothing to write home about, but thats alot of hits for me!
Also, I totally agree, that you have to take the concepts presented in these vids, and apply them on your own workflow.... Not everyone has massive, (so I made the Reason one) but either way, its the general idea that is the point of the video...
Thanks for all the kindness!!
Posted: Thu Jan 17, 2008 5:01 pm
by robphobos
Although I'm not new to producing (+10years), I haven't actually used a 'wobble' in my music but I thought it was just filter modulation - and hey presto - you showed me.
Much appreciated, I may chuck a wobble on one of my stupid sounds now, if not, tis always fun to play !
p.s
Love the end logo animation/sound

Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2008 1:55 pm
by manray
Yes respect for making the video. It's nice to see people taking time to help the scene. I'm gonna be making some videos soon as well to try and help some beginners on here!
Posted: Fri Jan 18, 2008 2:01 pm
by manray
pacman wrote:I think wobble is just a sound like any other else. Even though a lot of people uses it I think you can still be original with it. It's something like an amen break in dnb. But again I am very new to whole dubstep thing so I might be wrong.

Exactly. It's just one sound. Using wobble doesn't make you unoriginal, it's the whole track that you are judged on. Anyone that says otherwise doesn't know what the farrk they are talking about.