15 Nisan 2013 Pazartesi

Basic Exploring of Soft Synths

Lets take a look at where the basic parts of various software synths are placed.

I have explored a number of different synths, and I think that those four are quite easy to use at first.

1. Massive
2. FreeAlpha
3. Podolski
4. Sychte

Here's the video:



Massive has an almost fully functional (No saving) demo and the other three are examples of freeware synths that I've found after a little research.


Regards

6 Nisan 2013 Cumartesi

Using the Equaliser on Ableton live 8

Hello, this is assessment 5 for introduction to music production on Coursera.

In this tutorial, I'd like to show you a basic demonstration of how to use the equalizer in your DAW.


The gear I will be using is:
  • Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 USB audio interface
  • Mac mini 
  • Ableton Live 8 lite DAW
I have recorded the drums, bass and guitar from the intro of the song ”A light that never goes out” by the Smiths for this tutorial, all tracks are performed by me, so forgive my sloppy playing especially on the drums. I've used a Yamaha DTX-400K electronic drum set with its own module sounds (No VST).

Once I've done the recording, i've added some slap back delay to the guitar track, and reverb to the entire mix (these are not in the context of this very tutorial). 

Very soon after adding the first two effects, I found out that the drums sounded a little different than what I desired, with the hihat being very high and the snare drum very low. Then I picked an EQ eight (Ableton live's built in EQ), and started playing with it. Here's the video that I've made, make sure you watch it in HD:



Briefly what i've done is; choose the drum channel and pick up a spectrum analyzer to check the snare drum and hi-hat frequencies. Then I add an EQ eight and change the frequency gains. Later on i've shown how to save the preset for this specific DAW.

I hope this was helpful. I'm planning to make more videos on using the slap-back delay for guitar widening, and reverb for the whole mix, but that's it for now.

Thank you

10 Mart 2013 Pazar

Direct Monitoring on Focusrite Scarlett 2i2



Here's how to use "direct monitoring", which is available in many modern audio interfaces.

The gear I will be using is:

  • Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 USB audio interface
  • Lap-top Windows PC
  • Creative 245 stereo speakers (with integrated TRS cable)
  • Ableton Live 8 lite DAW
  • Two TS 1/4 inch cables (90cm each)
  • Zoom G2 guitar processor 
  • ESP LTD M-100 electric guitar circa 2001
First of all, take a quick look at figure 1 to see the setup that i'm using.

Figure 1. The Setup
Here is a little explanation of the setup above:
The guitar is connected to the input of Zoom G2 via TS cable 1, the output of Zoom G2 is connected to the Scarlett interface via TS cable 2. The interface is connected to the PC via usb, Creative speakers are connected to the headphone output of the interface for monitoring.

I will use two different DAW configurations to demonstrate the use of direct monitoring, hardware configuration will remain the same as above except for the "Direct Monitor" switch on the interface. 

Lets start with "Direct Monitor" OFF on the interface hardware. Here is the channel configuration on Ableton Live 8 Lite:

Figure 2. DAW channel setting 1

The configuration on figure 2 was default when I first started the new project. Yours might be the same or a little different, but make sure that you click the Rec Channel button on the right hand side, and set software monitoring to auto and we're ready to play the guitar. - or NOT?

In the above configuration, you can feel that whatever you play comes out of the speakers with delay, which may cause you to run out of sync while trying to record. You can think of the signal flow like that:


Figure 3. Latency
Looking at figure 3, you can imagine that whatever signal you send to the interface, is sent to the PC via USB (Step 1) where it is processed and recorded and sent back to the interface (step 2) since we turned software monitoring ON. On step 3, sound comes out of the speakers with a delay, because of the processing time taken between steps 1 and 2. 

To overcome this problem, we need to turn Direct Monitor ON on the interface hardware, so that whatever you play is sent to the software to be processed and recorded, but what you hear actually bypasses the processing step and sent directly to the speakers. Take a look at figure 4. 

Figure 4. Direct Monitoring

Note that there is no step 2 in this configuration. In order to eliminate step 2, change your DAW channel Software monitoring setting to OFF. 

Important Note: Low software monitoring latency can be achieved with different driver settings or faster hardware, but for the sake of this lesson, all you need to know is that processing always takes some amount of time, and direct monitoring is an easy way to avoid sync problems while recording.