P Pumpthrust New member Aug 8, 2016 #2 ..Super Evan said: Someone please help me Click to expand... No. Last edited: Aug 8, 2016
JustChadMichael The Scientist! Aug 15, 2016 #3 Pumpthrust said: No. Click to expand... this is what this forum has become?
C Cyko Active member Aug 15, 2016 #4 ..Super Evan said: Someone please help me Click to expand... From real records? In this video he's going from record player to sampler to interface. All you would have to do is go from record player to your interface and record in your daw. Then take what you want from the break.. very easy Last edited: Aug 15, 2016
..Super Evan said: Someone please help me Click to expand... From real records? In this video he's going from record player to sampler to interface. All you would have to do is go from record player to your interface and record in your daw. Then take what you want from the break.. very easy
KonKossKang Ozagas Aug 16, 2016 #5 Pick a sampler vst or use a daw as a sampler. Learn it inside and out. And patience. Zero crossings and whatnot involving start and end points of samples. Youtube can teach you almost anything about electronic music.
Pick a sampler vst or use a daw as a sampler. Learn it inside and out. And patience. Zero crossings and whatnot involving start and end points of samples. Youtube can teach you almost anything about electronic music.
I'mNoGuru New member Aug 22, 2016 #6 As the 2 posts above but truncate the sample to the bar (1-bar minimum - 2-bars is often easier) as cleanly as possible so that it'll loop cleanly... A tight loop is much easier to manipulate, timestretch and chop on most samplers.
As the 2 posts above but truncate the sample to the bar (1-bar minimum - 2-bars is often easier) as cleanly as possible so that it'll loop cleanly... A tight loop is much easier to manipulate, timestretch and chop on most samplers.