hard as fuck!!

very inspiring C:

82

(20 replies, posted in General Discussion)

hi!! :DDDD

83

(35 replies, posted in Past Events)

i shouldn't still be on my gameboy at this point lol

running the samples through chipcrusher at 16bit w/ a high sample rate will sound about as rough as the Red Book audio standard...

yeah you need to try the different compression algorithms in chipcrusher. you can make stuff sound like it was processed through a speak n spell

86

(5 replies, posted in Nintendo Handhelds)

flat batteries?

hitler?

magic???

87

(3 replies, posted in Releases)

88

(35 replies, posted in Past Events)

well this is a nice turn of events

i finally get to have my ass whooped at mtg in another state ;DDD

89

(5 replies, posted in General Discussion)

nice one yerz, i've never gone out of my way to check out beeper tunes and i'm super impressed!!

i guess i need to get a sinclair now LOL

90

(6 replies, posted in Sega)

this is freakin awesome

that bend box is super clean! Would love to see this thing hooked up w/ MIDI :DD

91

(35 replies, posted in Other Hardware)

straight up digital preamp clipping sounds nice w/ lsdj imho

DMV.ppt wrote:

I can never stick to one thing, but I'm most familiar with Ableton, Renoise, and Reaper. I've been obsessed with LSDj lately, it sounds great with my Monomachine and OP-1, which I suppose are really just software tied to hardware. For VST's I really like the VallhallaDSP plug-ins, Reaktor, Absynth, and MAX/MSP. I'm trying to move away from my computer, the Gameboy goes great with headphones in the park, but then I have to wear pants.

oh heck yes +1 for the OP-1. I've owned both LSDJ and an OP-1 for ages, but only recently got around to combining the two. I think i'm going to try and bust this combo out at the squaresounds pre-party

alexras, thanks for your work on this, it's just the sort of thing i've been after. i'm quite keen to see how this project progresses (no pressure tho!)

LSDJ
Acid Pro 2 or 3
ReBirth

i imagine Bitwig is going to be pretty dooope

95

(4 replies, posted in Other Hardware)

this is really sick!

could use some more kick drums i think

otherwise i don't have too much to add. you obviously understand basic chords and harmony and stuff, now you just need to put in the practice, experiment, RTFM (i wish i had done this in the beginning), try to understand what every function and parameter does, test out other people's patches etc. a mate showed me a couple of tricks and they helped me think a bit more abstractly about the software, after i spent way too much time dwelling on the basics. actually, he uploaded a really good beginners tutorial which you might find useful, depending on how much you already know: