I really love the vinyl plug-in. I guess that is what it is. It gives
the opening the same feel as that one Primitive Radio Gods song that I
love.
I don't think the bass is too buried. I'm a professional bass player
and I would love to be that loud in the mix of 50% of the country gigs
I've done. Country soundmen are the worst for burying bass. They have
no concept that it doesn't really compete for any other frequencies
volume but still yet, I always get buried. Most country shows I play I
don't even care if I play the chords. I just dance around on stage.
Nobody can hear me anyway.
Maybe that is why local country sux.
chaz
james(a)dis-dot-dat.net wrote:
On Tue, 31 May, 2005 at 12:45PM +0200, Arnold Krille
spake thus:
On Tuesday 31 May 2005 11:41,
james(a)dis-dot-dat.net wrote:
On Mon, 30 May, 2005 at 10:06PM +0200, Arnold
Krille spake thus:
On Monday 30 May 2005 05:01, james(a)dis-dot-dat.net
wrote:
> Here's quite a short test of a track I'm working on:
>
http://dis-dot-dat.net/music/alltehtriptest.ogg
>
>
First thought: Vinyl-Plugin RulZ!!!
I'm sure it does. Not on this track, though, sorry :)
The first seconds sound like vinyl-plugin with an automated stop at the right
time...
I can't use syth plugins in cheesetracker, just effects. There's no
way to control the parameters of plugins within a track, which is annoying.
Second thought: a bit more of the bass-line, perhaps
just around the
800Hz to give it more bait.
Noted.
In the meantime I am unsure if this will work, since the 800Hz are my
experience from real electric basses, not electronics. Could be your samples
don`t have any signal there, so just try.
I think I have it sorted. A full version will be on it's way soon...
Arnold