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Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 03, 2013 7:16 pm
by HackerCow
So, this might be a dumb question, but is there a specific site where you can get that "sound effects" right before the drop (like skrillex's famous "yes! oh my god!")

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 03, 2013 7:22 pm
by press
the yes omg was sampled from a little girl doing stack cups in a video on youtube, he cut it himself...you should find them and cut them yourself as well. If you want risers and kickbombs and dopplers etc then perhaps there are some good sample packs out there for those but they can be recreated pretty easy as well.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 03, 2013 7:26 pm
by rockonin


Try freesound.org its good and its free.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 4:52 pm
by Benji
rockonin wrote:

I'd love to know how she feels about being sampled

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 5:30 pm
by mthrfnk
Benji wrote:
rockonin wrote:

I'd love to know how she feels about being sampled
She loved it. Skrillex even took her to some shows to do shit live. Over the top, but kinda cool.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 5:32 pm
by Benji
That is pretty sweet, and thanks, I never thought I'd have an answer to that

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Fri May 10, 2013 8:17 pm
by blinx

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 1:32 am
by koncide
Think you're referring to vocal samples. Get a youtube ripper for your system and everything on youtube is your playground.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 8:19 am
by outbound
I'm pretty sure I've got a few sample packs with vocal phrases chopped from films and stuff (more than 50 years ago so managed to get around copyright laws etc) but I couldn't find any use for them.

It seems what works best isn't necessarily what seems like the best idea on paper. The best ones come about from just having the track loop in the background while trawling youtube vids for hours on end looking for that golden nugget lol.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Sun May 12, 2013 9:25 am
by mthrfnk
outbound wrote:I'm pretty sure I've got a few sample packs with vocal phrases chopped from films and stuff (more than 50 years ago so managed to get around copyright laws etc) but I couldn't find any use for them.

It seems what works best isn't necessarily what seems like the best idea on paper. The best ones come about from just having the track loop in the background while trawling youtube vids for hours on end looking for that golden nugget lol.
This exactly, I also got one of those movie/old tv packs which sounded good but I can't get 90% of the samples to fit.

Definitely worth just looping your track and looking for either clips on YT, sounds on places like freesound or even just record something yourself. Then you can find something that fits perfectly.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Mon May 20, 2013 8:14 pm
by GenericNameHere
press wrote:the yes omg was sampled from a little girl doing stack cups in a video on youtube, he cut it himself...you should find them and cut them yourself as well. If you want risers and kickbombs and dopplers etc then perhaps there are some good sample packs out there for those but they can be recreated pretty easy as well.
D'you have a link for a tut or an explanation of what a "Doppler" is? Never heard of it, outside of physics class; I'm quite interested.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Mon May 20, 2013 8:32 pm
by Coolschmid
Its the same as in your physics class just without the physics. Pitch of a noise going up or pitch going down.

Re: Drop sound effects

Posted: Mon May 20, 2013 9:54 pm
by press
GenericNameHere wrote:
press wrote:the yes omg was sampled from a little girl doing stack cups in a video on youtube, he cut it himself...you should find them and cut them yourself as well. If you want risers and kickbombs and dopplers etc then perhaps there are some good sample packs out there for those but they can be recreated pretty easy as well.
D'you have a link for a tut or an explanation of what a "Doppler" is? Never heard of it, outside of physics class; I'm quite interested.
I dunno if its really a technical term tbh. but I consider them, similar to risers but usually with a lot of stereo, kinda sweeping back and forth stuff, usually with more sounds than just plain old white noise. The kind of transition noises and risers that when you put on some headphones they really get trippy with the stereo sweeps etc.

:corndance: :corntard: