by sampleandhold » Sun Jul 06, 2003 5:52 pm
i bounced them to minidisc then back again. you can do what you want...
WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNI
when you go to sample the tones, turn everything almost completely down. these tones are for calibration and they will blow your head off. seriously. for my music, when i use patches that i have made from them, i typically have the mixer inside the sampler say about 20 or even 15, while my drums will be at 127.
also, when you sample, you should sample at 440 hz.. what that is, is A4 on your keyboard. so if you set your origin after sampling and setting up a loop point, on A4, you will have a equal tempered scale that is accurate to say a piano... so when you hit c2, it will play c2 for real.
there are some really neat stuff you can do with test tones, i am making complete songs with them, for now since i don't have a synthesizer. and i may not get one, unless it is an analog modular type.. like a doepfer..
have fun and play around with it. you will actualy start making sounds kind of like how they did with old analog synths back then.
"{jU$t-n3Rv0U$-N-+h3-@Ll3y-W@y}"