From my experience, getting deeph oomphs is a matter of mixing sounds together. It's easy to alone, but when you start to add different sounds to it, overall impression loses it. The trick is to make stuff dynamic, it got me year to understand this. So try to start with huge headroom and then work your way through. If you want huge oommphh, you cannot have huge everything else. It is the little sounds that make another sounds big. Toni. --- In elektron-users@yahoogroups.com, "rydan" <rydan@...> wrote: > > Hello there! > > I have been experimenting quite a bit with my UW, and I really love it, > especially for creating weird percussive loops and strange sampling effects > using the ram machines. However, I feel the kick drums are a bit lacking. I > can't really put my finger on it, but they sound a bit thin I think. They > may be loud and cutting through, but it seems hard to get that extra, deep, > round oomph out of them. > > So, well, my other favourite for drum sounds is Attack, så I created a > really mean-sounding trance style kick, added some unmild compression (UAD-1 > rocks!), and exported to a wav file. Transfered it to the machinedrum and > Tada!, eeeh oh, no, wait, the ooomph was gone again... > > Is it just me, or is anybody else experiencing this? > > /Patrik >
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Re: Machinedrum bottom end lacking...
2006-05-10 by tahvenaine2002
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