Great to see you back. You do a great job with tutorials, and I really appreciate the way you come at things from a different angle, especially in regards to Bitwig and the grid. Thank you!
Hey, nice to see you back. I posted a comment/question on another video of yours a while back asking about grabbing the lowest note of a chord. This was in the context of an idea my drummer and I had about using a drum trigger to play a bassline. I just wanted to tell you that I figured it out in Bitwig, no VSTs. I'm not sure what update made it possible. Anyway, it works great. Low latency, sounds neat. Using a real drum + trigger and an external synth (but could be a Bitwig synth). Decoupling the midi note and the gate was the trick. I used a button plus a modulator like you showed for a minute there. I need to make a video about it.
Yes, please do a step by step breakdown of how you built the note effects and what each of the components is actually doing. I am relatively new to Bitwig and certainly new to the grid. I haven't seen much in terms of developing a basic understanding of what the various grid components do and how to get started building simple effects. I would find this very helpful. Thank you!
Ableton live has been my main mixing and mastering tool since 2012, before that Samplitude Pro in 2001. I've been wondering how much of a help it would be to start mixing in Bitwig, so this is very compelling.
The note fx patch in the video produces true unison, which is different from chorus, flange, or phase. It creates multiple copies of the same note at slightly different but stable pitches., unlike audio effects.
He lives. Good to have you back.
This was my first thought too.
Great to see you back. You do a great job with tutorials, and I really appreciate the way you come at things from a different angle, especially in regards to Bitwig and the grid. Thank you!
the last example was special. I want to see a step by step style tutorial of how to build it. knowing what it does is just a tease.
good to see you back kevin!
I loled at the thumbnail. Great to see you back
Really awesome tips here,, brilliant ideas! Made a track with it yesterday and today. The mix is incredible! Thank you!
Hey, nice to see you back. I posted a comment/question on another video of yours a while back asking about grabbing the lowest note of a chord. This was in the context of an idea my drummer and I had about using a drum trigger to play a bassline.
I just wanted to tell you that I figured it out in Bitwig, no VSTs. I'm not sure what update made it possible. Anyway, it works great. Low latency, sounds neat. Using a real drum + trigger and an external synth (but could be a Bitwig synth). Decoupling the midi note and the gate was the trick. I used a button plus a modulator like you showed for a minute there.
I need to make a video about it.
Really cool Tricks. Thanks for sharing 🌻
Yes, please do a step by step breakdown of how you built the note effects and what each of the components is actually doing. I am relatively new to Bitwig and certainly new to the grid. I haven't seen much in terms of developing a basic understanding of what the various grid components do and how to get started building simple effects. I would find this very helpful. Thank you!
love your amazing, thoughtful and deep videos. Loads of useful information. Thank you for enlightenment in the field of Bitwig
Great to see you back! Please post more often :)
I always learn so much from your videos. Thanks a ton!
I would love to see videos on how to make these! The note grid has been the most useful grid in my opinion
Ableton live has been my main mixing and mastering tool since 2012, before that Samplitude Pro in 2001. I've been wondering how much of a help it would be to start mixing in Bitwig, so this is very compelling.
legendary content
I wonder if Bitwig will intergrate Dolby Atmos mixing next?
That thumbnail is nostalgic
I just cant put my finger on why
Jeez this video is amazing
Musical and usefull :)
As interesting as this looks, I would be curious how this sounds in comparison to just a chorus+ or phase+
The note fx patch in the video produces true unison, which is different from chorus, flange, or phase. It creates multiple copies of the same note at slightly different but stable pitches., unlike audio effects.
how do i make this chord thing ?
Stop those stupid faces in thumbnails