What I really like about your tutorials is you explain how you shape the effects to the sound you want rather than just make a sound and just stick with it. You already have a purpose in mind with a sound and know what you want it to do. This is how I create my music as well. Anyway really useful tips for leads and pads thanks :)
Thank you! i do a lot of preparation going into these tutorials. Yeah, if you know roughly how a few knobs affect the sound, you can start predicting how the patch is gonna sound before tweaking. That said though, randomly tweaking knobs is still a fun and useful way to find new patches :D
One of the major selling points for these devices is the buttons. They’re so so satisfying to clickity clack while you’re programming your drum computer or synth. They put this superb coating on the keys and make them just beg to be touched. Terrific design
As a Digitakt owner I was hesitant to check out this DigiTONE video, cause I don't want to be tempted buying one at all... but the good thing is that I learn more about the Digitakt - and producing in general - by watching this, cause there interfaces are so consistent. So muchos kudos to both you and Elektron. ♥️
I'm glad you checked out my video! They two boxes have almost identical workflow. When I bought the Digitone, 90% of the muscle memory I built up on the Digitakt worked perfectly on the Digitone :D
In your last video (train) I commented that I wished my Digitone sounded like yours. Now it does!! 🙏🏻 Love your tutorial style and sounds. Thank you for sharing your process - really helps getting to grips with this fabulous machine.
Coming in late here, but I’m so thankful you made this. I was considering selling the digitone as I was having a hard time finding sounds I heard mentally. Thank you. This is it.
Fantastic video, sir. Presenting it as a "recipe" really makes the ideas stick and make sense. You've done a geat job exploring some of the deeper aspects of sound design on this synth!
Been thinking about getting a digitone as I love the FM sound but thought it was a bit too complex for me. Now I found your tutorials I think I'll get one (maybe after Christmas). Thanks for sharing, great tutorial 👏🏾👍🏾🙏🏾
I've been trying to decide for some months now about which synth to add to my Digitakt. Your video might just have decided the matter for me. Really nice!
Every time I get frustrated with Digitone I visit your TH-cam page to remind myself of the beautiful sounds that can come out of this amazing little machine. Very nice work, as usual!
Thank you very much, Rob! The frustration is definitely understandable. Sometimes it's hard to break out of the metallic bell-like or steel drum-like sounds.
I liked this machine before but I absolutely love it now. Wow, so well explained. FM had me confused but your general setup has been suuuper helpful. Thank you my man!
Hope you make more tutorials like this. I finally pulled the pin and have a Digitone on the way (its in the mail as I type)l but I used your techniques in this video to create sounds on my Hydrasynth desktop. Decent and useable sounds too. More sound design tutorials please :)
Looks fun. My Yamaha MoxF8 has a multi track sequencer that I never use anymore. I think hardware is more fun sometimes; hands on is just simpler and more laidback.
i really like your style of tutorials :) (the conciseness, thoroughness, and handwritten visible outline ) i watched 3 before I realized I wasn't subscribed.
Thanks a lot, Frank! I'm glad you like my tutorials. A lot of time is spent planning exactly what to include and what to leave out before recording these =)
I followed your tutorial and recreated everything along with you, So very cool.... I really enjoy the Digitone and all of your tutorials. Thanks again Ivar, for another great presentation
Well that was awesome. Now I just need more work because it has gone from “I don’t like DNs” to... “I want one” 😂 you have a great way of teaching. Clear and precise, and with sounds I love, which really made me stay the whole 30mins.
Man this is grand.... -A little more than one year ago i (lately) realized how synthesizers were magnificient machines, thanks to an emulated Jupiter8 vst. So i began my journey in synths thinking i'd be a "analog-only" guy because FM synthesis felt cold, aggressive and too complex. -Now in the last two months or so, i've discovered your channel, played Hyper Light Drifter and was blown by the score ....and got myself a Digitone. -Sometimes you just have to listen what the world is telling you. -Thanks for the tutorials and great music.
That's awesome, man! That sounds like a great journey, and I'm glad you gave FM a chance. I haven't played hyperlight drifter, but I love Disasterpeace's music! He also made the soundtrack for It Follows and FEZ. Congrats on getting a Digitone, I hope it suits your workflow =)
Hi Ivar, another great video. I finally bought the Digitone to go with my Digitakt, it is incredible, so many things, i love it. I do not regret having sold 2 old korg (Ea-1, Er-1 mk2) to buy it I reproduced your patch :) so Beautiful ! !! I love this kind of video where you explain a patch from A to Z, thank you.
Thank you very much, Marteau. Congrats on getting the Digitone, they are both such great boxes :D. I'm glad you like the explanation, I had fun writing notes and recording this tutorial :)
Wow I just knew the LFO modulating another LFO thing! You can't get more FM-y than that lol. Thanks for walking us through your whole sound design process!
Thank you for this, it has given me so many ideas for LFO use I hadn’t yet tried on my digitone keys! These tips are greatly appreciated and you’ve got a subscriber here in the future if you ever decide to start a Patreon or any other support based thing.
Really great video, thanks for putting this together. I’ve had my DT for some time and have clearly been overlooking some of the settings and features you mentioned. Brilliant!
Thank you, Lozza! It's packed with a lot of features, but with a bit of creativity you can get so much more out of it. It makes experimenting really rewarding :)
Just want to say - immense thank you for these! It makes so much sense, educates and helps me control the DN through understanding it. You're doing such a great job explaining and it's really appreciated! Thanks!
Hello again Ivar! Just a note to let you know that you still not having a Patreon and releasing patches is a missed opportunity. With the quality and frequency of your videos, a lot of use are interested in supporting you (and stealing your patches) Please consider it!
Hey man, thank you very much! You inspired me to make a post here on youtube about Patreon. Here it is, if you'd like to take a look: th-cam.com/users/oitryticommunity Let me know what you think!
Brilliant content! The tutorial is great and the music is stunning, gone trough all the comments to see if you have released it. If you haven’t, you could! You are talented. 🔥🔥
Thank you very much, man! I don't think I've released this one. I made it specifically for this tutorial, but it's not a bad idea to go back and expand on it :)
A great tutorial.. thanks b👌🏻 I am just waiting for my Digitone keys to arrive and trying to learn as much as possible between refreshing the status on my UPS account 🤣
Your tutorials for this device are top notch. I recently received the Digitakt 2 from my brother, would you pick the Digitone over the Syntakt to compliment the DT2? I wonder if Elektron are about to release a Digitone 2 soon.
Very good demonstration of voice stealing at 26 minutes. I was wondering for instance why an arp would ever use more than one voice, because it's kind of the definition of arps that it breaks chords into monophonic melodies by alternating between the notes in the chord. But one good way to think about it is probably the release: if that makes the note ring out longer than the beginning of the next note, then it will need two voices to accurately play both the release of the previous note and the attack of the following at the same time. One question (if you're still reading after 3 years): is it only the release that can cause voice steeling in an arp? So if you had zero release, then there would be no voice steeling beyond the one single voice that track uses? Or are there other issues that can make arp notes overlap?
Thank you! Double-stopping stops all sounds, including the release parts of all voices and also delay and reverb. If pressed once, the stop button just stops playback, but all sounds continue playing until they fade out.
Hey Ivar! You've answered my questions before, ND for thank you again for that. I have another one for you! I had asked you about which one would you get first. You said digitakt, but not by much. I'm actually leaning now towards the digitone, because I want to use it to create sounds as opposed to sample manipulation. I will then take the sounds I made in the digitone and put then into an sp404. That's the idea. My question is this... The digitone would be my very first synth. I've used synths before, but have never owned one. I've heard so many people talk about FM, sayings it's really difficult and so on. I'm really interested in the beautiful sounds to be made. Would you say it's difficult? In your opinion, can someone just mess around and come up with nice patches or do you have to be really super super super knowledgeable to use this digitone? And, where are you from?? That's two questions 😂 Big bless, American living in Germany
Hey sorry about the late reply! It's my pleasure man, hehe. Ah, whichever you choose, you can't go wrong. The Digitone simplifies FM in a very nice way. The principles are the same, but it only has 4 operators instead of 6, and you can toggle between 8 different algorithms as opposed to the original 32 algorithms. The thing with FM in my experience is that there are many, many sweet spots but they're all also very, very tiny. Anything in between will have the same (usually) undesirable FM grittiness. With only 4 operators instead of 6 there's less to keep track of, but you're not really losing out on that much sound wise. That is, unless you want a very specific sound that might not even be picked out in a mix. They also cut down the algorithms to 8, which as far as I've heard, are specifically chosen to cover as much ground as possible. The original algorithms apparently had a lot of overlap and similar sounds, which were all cut to make things more straight forward. I'd say it's not too difficult as long as you explore with intent and watch tutorials. I'm from Norway :D
I found this tutorial pretty inspiring to put hands on FM synthesis, I'd like to ask (to anyone) what would you get, a Digitone or a Korg Opsix and why ?
Thank you! The Digitone would give me the most value because I can use it as a fully standalone groovebox rather than just a great sound source to use somewhere else. If I sequenced my tracks in a DAW or a different piece of gear, the Opsix would be an interesting option.
Beautiful sounds my man. Do you think it’s worth it to pickup the Digitone Keys? I’m getting one or the other, seems like the quick knobs would go far with real-time control.
Thank you! I can't say anything for or against the DN Keys, because I've never tried it. Personally I prefer *not* to have a keyboard, because I'm not a keyboard player and I tend to play only as well as my muscle memory allows. I'm more comfortable with just the DN itself. If you're a keys player, then I think the extra macro knobs you get could be worth it, though.
One more question - can I ask about your recording setup? Are you recording your voice, the Digitone output, and the video, as three separate streams, then glueing them together in video editing software somehow? I want to make vids and am just curious how you're doing it. Thanks!
This video really sealed the deal on my picking up a digitone and now it's my most used synth
That's awesome to hear, thanks a lot man! The Digitone is on my never sell list :D
I just watched this again on my lunch, and that trick of slowly swelling the chorus into the delay and reverb is so clever, sounds fantastic.
What I really like about your tutorials is you explain how you shape the effects to the sound you want rather than just make a sound and just stick with it. You already have a purpose in mind with a sound and know what you want it to do. This is how I create my music as well. Anyway really useful tips for leads and pads thanks :)
Thank you! i do a lot of preparation going into these tutorials. Yeah, if you know roughly how a few knobs affect the sound, you can start predicting how the patch is gonna sound before tweaking. That said though, randomly tweaking knobs is still a fun and useful way to find new patches :D
One of the major selling points for these devices is the buttons. They’re so so satisfying to clickity clack while you’re programming your drum computer or synth. They put this superb coating on the keys and make them just beg to be touched. Terrific design
This is a fantastic tutorial. Really helped open up some concepts of the Digitone.
Thanks for watching! I'm glad you found it helpful :)
I know what I'm doing today! Thanks for sharing this. Always appreciate the pen and paper
Thanks for watching, man :D Hope it's helpful!
As a Digitakt owner I was hesitant to check out this DigiTONE video, cause I don't want to be tempted buying one at all... but the good thing is that I learn more about the Digitakt - and producing in general - by watching this, cause there interfaces are so consistent.
So muchos kudos to both you and Elektron. ♥️
I'm glad you checked out my video! They two boxes have almost identical workflow. When I bought the Digitone, 90% of the muscle memory I built up on the Digitakt worked perfectly on the Digitone :D
I just bought an A4 Mk 2 and plenty of what you show is applicable to that unit. Excellent.
Ahh, that's awesome! Congrats on getting an A4 mk2, it's good to hear that my tutorial works on that one too :)
In your last video (train) I commented that I wished my Digitone sounded like yours. Now it does!! 🙏🏻 Love your tutorial style and sounds. Thank you for sharing your process - really helps getting to grips with this fabulous machine.
Hehe, thanks a lot man! I'm glad you found it helpful. I tried to keep the notes simple and not too specific to encourage experimenting :D
Coming in late here, but I’m so thankful you made this. I was considering selling the digitone as I was having a hard time finding sounds I heard mentally. Thank you. This is it.
Fantastic video, sir. Presenting it as a "recipe" really makes the ideas stick and make sense. You've done a geat job exploring some of the deeper aspects of sound design on this synth!
Thank you very much! I'm glad you like my approach. As long as I have notes on screen I can go on a rant without completely losing my place :D
I get my Digitone next week. Love all of the information found in these tutorials!
Ahh, congrats! And thanks, I'm glad to hear they're helping =)
Been thinking about getting a digitone as I love the FM sound but thought it was a bit too complex for me. Now I found your tutorials I think I'll get one (maybe after Christmas). Thanks for sharing, great tutorial 👏🏾👍🏾🙏🏾
Thanks for watching, man! FM is complex and hard to predict, but I think the Digitone simplifies FM very well.
The intro song is so beautiful! Thank you for a great tutorial.
Thank you! I'm glad you like the intro track and the tutorial :D
I've been trying to decide for some months now about which synth to add to my Digitakt. Your video might just have decided the matter for me. Really nice!
You have so many fantastic smart ideas, great tutorial Ivar! I'm getting a DN to pair with my DT this week and can't wait to try some of this!
Every time I get frustrated with Digitone I visit your TH-cam page to remind myself of the beautiful sounds that can come out of this amazing little machine. Very nice work, as usual!
Thank you very much, Rob! The frustration is definitely understandable. Sometimes it's hard to break out of the metallic bell-like or steel drum-like sounds.
I liked this machine before but I absolutely love it now. Wow, so well explained. FM had me confused but your general setup has been suuuper helpful. Thank you my man!
Hope you make more tutorials like this. I finally pulled the pin and have a Digitone on the way (its in the mail as I type)l but I used your techniques in this video to create sounds on my Hydrasynth desktop. Decent and useable sounds too. More sound design tutorials please :)
wow... one of the most useful tutorials out there! thanks a lot!
Thank you very much!
wish i'd watched this sooner, great tutorial. that delay trick with the ramp lfo is so good!
Looks fun. My Yamaha MoxF8 has a multi track sequencer that I never use anymore. I think hardware is more fun sometimes; hands on is just simpler and more laidback.
thanks for the hints , it 's like rain in a drought.
i really like your style of tutorials :) (the conciseness, thoroughness, and handwritten visible outline )
i watched 3 before I realized I wasn't subscribed.
Thanks a lot, Frank! I'm glad you like my tutorials. A lot of time is spent planning exactly what to include and what to leave out before recording these =)
Thank you Ivar. That's one of the best Elektron tutorials I've seen.
Lots of great ideas for my new Digitone!
Thanks a lot, Ali! I'm glad you found it helpful :D
I love your handwritten notes. Very informative and enjoyable.
I followed your tutorial and recreated everything along with you, So very cool....
I really enjoy the Digitone and all of your tutorials. Thanks again Ivar, for another great presentation
Awesome man, I'm glad you like the tutorial! Thanks for watching =D
Well that was awesome. Now I just need more work because it has gone from “I don’t like DNs” to... “I want one” 😂 you have a great way of teaching. Clear and precise, and with sounds I love, which really made me stay the whole 30mins.
Thanks a lot for that really nice tutorial. You made me fell in love again with my Digitone.
That opening is very Lena Raine/Celeste OST. Those kinds of sounds just spill out of the digitone naturally
Yeah, the sounds it can make reminds me of Celeste a lot.
Man this is grand....
-A little more than one year ago i (lately) realized how synthesizers were magnificient machines, thanks to an emulated Jupiter8 vst.
So i began my journey in synths thinking i'd be a "analog-only" guy because FM synthesis felt cold, aggressive and too complex.
-Now in the last two months or so, i've discovered your channel, played Hyper Light Drifter and was blown by the score ....and got myself a Digitone.
-Sometimes you just have to listen what the world is telling you.
-Thanks for the tutorials and great music.
That's awesome, man! That sounds like a great journey, and I'm glad you gave FM a chance. I haven't played hyperlight drifter, but I love Disasterpeace's music! He also made the soundtrack for It Follows and FEZ. Congrats on getting a Digitone, I hope it suits your workflow =)
Fascinating. Didn't know you could do that with a delay.
Thanks! I'm glad you found it helpful! :)
You’re a brilliant gentleman, thank you for all your great videos
Hi Ivar,
another great video.
I finally bought the Digitone
to go with my Digitakt, it is incredible, so many things, i love it. I do not regret having sold 2 old korg (Ea-1, Er-1 mk2) to buy it
I reproduced your patch :) so Beautiful !
!!
I love this kind of video where you explain a patch from A to Z,
thank you.
Thank you very much, Marteau. Congrats on getting the Digitone, they are both such great boxes :D. I'm glad you like the explanation, I had fun writing notes and recording this tutorial :)
Wow I just knew the LFO modulating another LFO thing! You can't get more FM-y than that lol. Thanks for walking us through your whole sound design process!
Found this video linked in an elektronauts thread, followed it here and it looks like i was already subscribed! Thought that was funny
Superb!
Thanks, Bo! :D
This is the best tutorial. Really nice sounds. Reminds me sounds off a Fearofdark track.
Thank you very much! That's a huge compliment, his stuff is really impressive.
Beautiful music.
Awesome handwriting.
Voice sounds like Giorgio Moroder.
Very helpful thank you.
Thank you very much! I'm glad you like my tutorial, and my handwriting! =D
Thank you for this, it has given me so many ideas for LFO use I hadn’t yet tried on my digitone keys! These tips are greatly appreciated and you’ve got a subscriber here in the future if you ever decide to start a Patreon or any other support based thing.
Thanks man, I really appreciate it! Sometimes it's easy to overlook those not-completely-obvious connections between the LFOs.
Really great video, thanks for putting this together. I’ve had my DT for some time and have clearly been overlooking some of the settings and features you mentioned. Brilliant!
Thank you, Lozza! It's packed with a lot of features, but with a bit of creativity you can get so much more out of it. It makes experimenting really rewarding :)
Man, You saved my Digi(whatever) sunday. ❤️😘
You are the Godfather of Digitone Ambient ☺ That Pad is incredible..
Just want to say - immense thank you for these! It makes so much sense, educates and helps me control the DN through understanding it. You're doing such a great job explaining and it's really appreciated! Thanks!
Thanks for sharing your creative process. Much gratitude!
Sounds great. Instant Boards of Canada in a small box. This might just be the video that tips me over into (finally) buying a Digitone...
love this tutorial! Thank you! Finally today I will buy it!
Thank you! Congrats on getting a Digitakt, I hope it suits your workflow =D
You are the man Ivar! Best digitone tutorial
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing all these informations with us ! Cheers !
My pleasure, man. Thanks for watching!
Superdope sir. Another highly informative tutorial. Much appreciated indeed.
Thank you! I'm glad you found it helpful.
Created "Tryti Pad 1" tonight. Thank you!
Hehe, awesome man. Thanks a lot!
Hello again Ivar! Just a note to let you know that you still not having a Patreon and releasing patches is a missed opportunity. With the quality and frequency of your videos, a lot of use are interested in supporting you (and stealing your patches) Please consider it!
Hey man, thank you very much! You inspired me to make a post here on youtube about Patreon. Here it is, if you'd like to take a look: th-cam.com/users/oitryticommunity
Let me know what you think!
I am so thankful for his video. Amazing.
Thanks for watching, man! I'm happy to help =)
Thank you for this beautiful video !
Thanks for watching, man :)
Outstanding patches and music.
Brilliant content! The tutorial is great and the music is stunning, gone trough all the comments to see if you have released it. If you haven’t, you could!
You are talented. 🔥🔥
Thank you very much, man! I don't think I've released this one. I made it specifically for this tutorial, but it's not a bad idea to go back and expand on it :)
@@IvarTryti I’m intrigued with the arp/progression scale. Is it in D Phrygian and the progression a II, I, II , V with sus and augmented chords?
Thanks for a very useful tutorial, I love the sounds you’ve made!
Thanks for watching! Glad to hear you found it useful :)
Thanks Ivar, that was really helpful. Great sounds!
Thanks for watching, man :)
Great tutorial 👍👍
You help many to be better at creativity.
Thank you.
Thank you!
you are a beast man thank you for all the tutorials
Thank you! I'm glad you fins the tutorials helpful =)
Thank you for this, your music is inspiring
I'm glad you found it helpful! Thanks for watching =)
Incredible tutorial! Many props bruh! 🙏🏾
Thanks a lot, Sunny!
Some very nice techniques here, thanks 🙏
Fantastic tutorial. Great work.
Thanks man, I'm glad it helped :)
Thanks man - great tutorial, really well explained. These sounds are great, and I then went on to build some nice variations of each. 👍
Absolute magic
Thanks!
I always learn so much from you. Thank you!
I really enjoy your videos. Thanks for doing what you do, man. :)
Thanks, Jake! Glad you like my stuff =)
i picture a night raining day in a full neon light city
A great tutorial.. thanks b👌🏻
I am just waiting for my Digitone keys to arrive and trying to learn as much as possible between refreshing the status on my UPS account 🤣
Thanks for watching! That's a great idea, I did the same while waiting for my Digitakt =)
Lots of useful tricks! Thanks a lot for this vid ☺️
Thanks for watching, man :)
Great content. Well produced.
Just Gorgeous!!!
So many ideas! Thanks!
Thanks for watching, Brian!
Your tutorials for this device are top notch. I recently received the Digitakt 2 from my brother, would you pick the Digitone over the Syntakt to compliment the DT2? I wonder if Elektron are about to release a Digitone 2 soon.
Very helpful! FM is such a powerful way to synthesize sounds.
Very good demonstration of voice stealing at 26 minutes. I was wondering for instance why an arp would ever use more than one voice, because it's kind of the definition of arps that it breaks chords into monophonic melodies by alternating between the notes in the chord. But one good way to think about it is probably the release: if that makes the note ring out longer than the beginning of the next note, then it will need two voices to accurately play both the release of the previous note and the attack of the following at the same time.
One question (if you're still reading after 3 years): is it only the release that can cause voice steeling in an arp? So if you had zero release, then there would be no voice steeling beyond the one single voice that track uses? Or are there other issues that can make arp notes overlap?
Great tutorials, but can you show how to create an acoustic guitar type sound or something similar,
Beautiful.
Great tutorial! Thanks!
Thank you!
Thank you for this Ivar. Happy Holidays!
Thank you, Fernando! Happy holidays, man :)
@@IvarTryti Happy Holidays Ivar!!!
Aye man, excellent video, got inspired by the sound, amazing
Thanks a lot!
You are a big inspiration.
Thanks for the kind words, man!
Great tutorial! Thank you :)
Thanks for watching! I'm glad you like it :)
Excellent video thanks
Thank you!
Excellent tutorial! But why always double click on Stop button?
Thank you! Double-stopping stops all sounds, including the release parts of all voices and also delay and reverb. If pressed once, the stop button just stops playback, but all sounds continue playing until they fade out.
@@IvarTryti Perfect! Thank you! Subscribed!
Brilliant, as always. Thanks a lot:)
really nice sounds!
Thanks!
Hey Ivar!
You've answered my questions before, ND for thank you again for that. I have another one for you!
I had asked you about which one would you get first. You said digitakt, but not by much. I'm actually leaning now towards the digitone, because I want to use it to create sounds as opposed to sample manipulation. I will then take the sounds I made in the digitone and put then into an sp404. That's the idea.
My question is this...
The digitone would be my very first synth. I've used synths before, but have never owned one. I've heard so many people talk about FM, sayings it's really difficult and so on. I'm really interested in the beautiful sounds to be made.
Would you say it's difficult? In your opinion, can someone just mess around and come up with nice patches or do you have to be really super super super knowledgeable to use this digitone?
And, where are you from??
That's two questions 😂
Big bless,
American living in Germany
Hey sorry about the late reply! It's my pleasure man, hehe.
Ah, whichever you choose, you can't go wrong. The Digitone simplifies FM in a very nice way. The principles are the same, but it only has 4 operators instead of 6, and you can toggle between 8 different algorithms as opposed to the original 32 algorithms. The thing with FM in my experience is that there are many, many sweet spots but they're all also very, very tiny. Anything in between will have the same (usually) undesirable FM grittiness. With only 4 operators instead of 6 there's less to keep track of, but you're not really losing out on that much sound wise. That is, unless you want a very specific sound that might not even be picked out in a mix. They also cut down the algorithms to 8, which as far as I've heard, are specifically chosen to cover as much ground as possible. The original algorithms apparently had a lot of overlap and similar sounds, which were all cut to make things more straight forward.
I'd say it's not too difficult as long as you explore with intent and watch tutorials.
I'm from Norway :D
I found this tutorial pretty inspiring to put hands on FM synthesis, I'd like to ask (to anyone) what would you get, a Digitone or a Korg Opsix and why ?
Thank you! The Digitone would give me the most value because I can use it as a fully standalone groovebox rather than just a great sound source to use somewhere else. If I sequenced my tracks in a DAW or a different piece of gear, the Opsix would be an interesting option.
Great video!! Thank you, , A like 👍& I subscribed
Thank you very much, man! I didn't get a notification for this, sorry about the late reply :D
very nice! thanks
Glad you like it!
Excellent ! Thanks.
Thank you🙏🙏🙏🙏
Thank you too!
Would I be right in thinking you could use your midi keyboard as an alternative to the sequence buttons?
Thank u so much, u r a star!
Beautiful sounds my man. Do you think it’s worth it to pickup the Digitone Keys? I’m getting one or the other, seems like the quick knobs would go far with real-time control.
Thank you! I can't say anything for or against the DN Keys, because I've never tried it. Personally I prefer *not* to have a keyboard, because I'm not a keyboard player and I tend to play only as well as my muscle memory allows. I'm more comfortable with just the DN itself. If you're a keys player, then I think the extra macro knobs you get could be worth it, though.
Thank you very much
My pleasure, thanks for watching :)
One more question - can I ask about your recording setup? Are you recording your voice, the Digitone output, and the video, as three separate streams, then glueing them together in video editing software somehow? I want to make vids and am just curious how you're doing it. Thanks!
Good job! You have a new subscriber
Thank you very much!