josbouma
(Blastbot)
April 21, 2012, 7:29pm
1
My first tutorial on the forums and I’m dutch, so please don’t mind my grammar
What you will need:
VST: GTune for tuning the loop point
Sample: A kick with enough sustain/room for a loop point
Brain
Steps:
Load a kick, and find a loop point you like (*)
Load GTune and start adjusting the instrument transpose or finetune
to get the note you are hitting (**)
Adjust instrument pitch envelope to get more punch,
this might depend on the note you are playing
Adjust instrument volume envelope for sidechain or gate effect
Example:
Example file
Example details:
Instrument 00 is the original kick sample
Instrument 01 is me trying to find a good loop point
Instrument 02 is me finding a nice loop point
Instrument 03 is the same as 02 but using pitch and volume envelopes
Remarks:
(*) Use the loop fine editor to create seamless loops
(**) If you hit C, use GTune to tune your loop point to C
Edit:
I’ve moved the example from 4shared to dropbox, should be instant download now.
harold
(harold)
April 22, 2012, 4:14am
2
This sounds interesting. I’d like to see the demo file.
Instead of using whatever site you chose, which looks weird and scary, why not just attach the file to your post?
-Harold
josbouma
(Blastbot)
April 22, 2012, 9:43am
3
Thanks for the reply.
I’ve moved the example to dropbox.
It should be an instant download now.
harold
(harold)
April 22, 2012, 7:31pm
4
Cool technique. Didn’t know about GTune. Neat stuff.
-Harold
Foo
(mr_mark_dollin)
April 23, 2012, 9:16am
5
GTune is super useful! I use it very regularly, especially when dealing with songs that use old tracker samples that are off concert pitch and need correcting.
I did this trick for a song a while back (see: http://markdollin.bandcamp.com/track/my-heart-only-beats-for-you ) and I made use of the glissando pattern effect code to bend the bass note part to different pitches. This has the advantage of retaining the set pitch of the kick-attack.
Gooze
(Ozego)
April 23, 2012, 6:57pm
6
Good old dnb and dub-techno technique that never fails. <3
You can use this to tune it instead of a VST: Sample Tuning Calculator (2.8)