Hi All!
Want tips on making my own patches.
Pads, Leads, Polysynths and Basses.
I know pads generally have a slower attack on a lot of them but is there any specific elements people would go for in these patch designs?
What would you listen / go for in a bass patch or a pad say?
I suppose for pads, it'd depend on what type of pad...moving pad, atmospheric, bell pad, bright pad etc.
Warm Pad on Subtractor is a nice pad. I've included a pic. It seems to be made with 2 sawtooth waves with a +5 and -5 cent adjustment. What would that detune give / add to the patch? It has a medium attack, no decay, high sustain and a long-ish release. There's no resonance and the filter cutoff is just under half way. If you open the cutoff the sound goes a lot more piercing if that's a good description and doesn't sound as nice. It definitely has that Juno kind of warm sound to it hence the name.
It was under Static pads. I'm assuming they called the patches there Static as opposed to moving.
Be interested to know what people do here.
Thanks!
Want tips on making my own patches.
Pads, Leads, Polysynths and Basses.
I know pads generally have a slower attack on a lot of them but is there any specific elements people would go for in these patch designs?
What would you listen / go for in a bass patch or a pad say?
I suppose for pads, it'd depend on what type of pad...moving pad, atmospheric, bell pad, bright pad etc.
Warm Pad on Subtractor is a nice pad. I've included a pic. It seems to be made with 2 sawtooth waves with a +5 and -5 cent adjustment. What would that detune give / add to the patch? It has a medium attack, no decay, high sustain and a long-ish release. There's no resonance and the filter cutoff is just under half way. If you open the cutoff the sound goes a lot more piercing if that's a good description and doesn't sound as nice. It definitely has that Juno kind of warm sound to it hence the name.
It was under Static pads. I'm assuming they called the patches there Static as opposed to moving.
Be interested to know what people do here.
Thanks!
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