Maybe burn the TB-303 sampled tones on to a 16mb Flash rom from an Ultra Sampler.
http://www.discoverysound.com/en/DFSD010/
Hey it's coming out of the Command Station right?
I honestly think with the LFO's and filters a person could get some pretty crazy stuff.
I'm not saying it would be creamy sounding like a real 303, but there would be some crazy textures and modulation in there.
On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 12:59 PM, Scott Solmonson <scosol@...> wrote:
Well, James- I pretty much agree, which is why I thought it would be a good sort of fun challenge.
Of course, it would have to be limited to one particular 303 sound, but whatever, nobody was really interested anyway :)
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On Dec 22, 2010, at 12:50 PM, James Ulibarri wrote:
>
>
> I am not saying I would do it either. What I was saying was that a TB-303 sampling CD would actually be better than trying to get convincible TB-303 tones out of the Command Station. Which is 1000% impossible. The only people would say that it "actually sounds like a real 303" would be the people who never have owned one or used one for an extended period of time. Someone in their teens or early 209;s. They simply don't know.... they just think they know.
>
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> On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 12:39 PM, Atom Smasher <atom@smasher.org> wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, 22 Dec 2010, James Ulibarri wrote:
>
> > Now if you're talking like a fake 303 screaming lead sound drenched in
> > plastic sounding reverb than maybe, and anything could be used I guess.
>
> <>
>
>
> > You can buy a TB-303 sampler CD and replicate the tones that way with a
> > sampler, but not from anything internally.
> ===================
>
> IMHO, the former is preferable to the latter. samples of classic drum
> machines are one thing... sampling a TB-303 just doesn't make any sense to
> me (unless it's to replicate multi-tracking).
>
> --
> ...atom
>
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> and small enough to win."
> -- Johnathan Kozol
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