Learn how to use the triple oscillator, it looks simple but there's a whole world of different sounds behind those knobs. If you start over-relying on samples, your music will sound fake and repetitive. I'd say forget about samples, you don't really need samples for anything except percussion and sound effects, and for now you should just mostly forget about samples and get yourself familiar with the synths instead. Could this be made up for with something like Audacity? So if you grab higher quality samples from somewhere then would you say that high quality music for the most part would be indistinguishable with LMMS vs FL Studio? It was mentioned that the controls are a little more in depth with fl studio. Then just automate the cutoff to go in long sweeps, from low frequency to high (and back to low, as needed).īluesh1ft wrote:Thanks for the responses guys. Bandpass filter works well, although a lowpass or 2xlowpass are quite nice as well. Then go to the second tab of the instrument window, and activate the filter. Then you can add second and third oscs to it and do whatever with them, experiment with it. If you want phat leads, it's easiest to do by taking saw wave (moog saw if you want a bit softer sound) oscs and detuning them, set left finetune to -5 and right finetune to +5 or something like that, then add a bit of stereo phase in it (turn the SPO knob to 180), this makes it so that left and right channels are in opposite phases, it gives the sound a bit of "room", it's like a reverb without reverb, kind of. And ZynAddSub, but ZynAddSub is a bit more advanced topic. I think the standard filter (the one included in the instruments) works on everything except the LB-302, and VST. Luckily, LMMS comes with those right out of the box for most instruments. Phaser/flanger are LFO-based effects, where the effect variates (oscillates) constantly according to the knob setting, and getting the timing of the LFO right for a buildup would be a really big pain in the donkey. You don't really want to do buildups with phaser/flanger. So on my guitar with my effect pedal if I want a big phase sound from high frequency to low like some of those big buildups like in electronic music Do I have to get my degree in Lmms because it has the name Linux in it? So once again in audacity or with guitar pedals I can usually set the number of echos but all the add effects in lmms do not have this settings, i think.,Īny help or tips would be appreciated. So on my guitar with my effect pedal if I want a big phase sound from high frequency to low like some of those big buildups like in electronic music, its so easy, but when I try to create something similar in LMMS, like adding phaser effects (phaser flang etc.) it does hardly nothing even when im moving the knobs all around. I am a classically trained musician, but very inexperienced with sound engineering.Īre the samples or effects not as high of quality in Lmms as they are in professional setups or FL studio? I don't know if its just me or the quality of packaged LMMS samples or the confusing interface but I am having a heck of a hard time recreating that very Ambient ethereal sound and phat beats that is common in electronic music (trance especially).
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