Magnificent work. You could tell me this was a real orchestra, and I'd believe it. I'm especially impressed with how you managed to get the brass to sound. I read below this was all SSO, which I struggle to get to work, myself. 😅
@@SipiOvaska Evidently! The stuff that plays the nicest, I've found, is the ow brass. The CB tuba is [chef's kiss] Also, I've listened to some of your other work after leaving my previous comment. Good stuff all around. I'm surprised you don't have more subs.
@@NailikNoteworks Thanks man. I'm most fond of the versatile horns a2, and the beautiful solo trumpet :) I've only just started posting my music to TH-cam a couple of months ago and haven't promoted it in any way, just taking the blessings the recommendation algorithm gives me.
@@SipiOvaska For starting out just recently, it's not bad at all. 😄 Say, care for some critique exchanges? Share your thoughts on some of my work (fellow creator here. :D) and I on yours.
Amazing work you did here SipiOvaskaMusic! i did some arrangments myself from ff xii as well. I was wondering if you could tell me which vst and additional plugins were used here. Also, is there any chance i could ask for the midi file (if u want i can send some of mine). Thank you and keep up the good work
I think it's all Spitfire symphonic orchestra, w/ chamber strings, percussion and harp. There's some light EQ on some instruments, and a little bit of reverb, saturation and multiband compression on the mix bus. There's really no special sauce there (the great libraries speak for themselves), and I'm not an expert on mastering so going into more detail probably isn't helpful :) If you want references, you can find most pre-ps3 era Final Fantasy game notation data rips online, which are superbly useful especially with Sakimoto's complex arrangements. You can find them by googling "joshw psf2", and you can open them with e.g. a program called GMTrans
Magnificent work. You could tell me this was a real orchestra, and I'd believe it.
I'm especially impressed with how you managed to get the brass to sound. I read below this was all SSO, which I struggle to get to work, myself. 😅
SSO (especially the brass) does often take a lot of fiddling to get the right sound, but if you succeed it's so worth it :)
@@SipiOvaska Evidently! The stuff that plays the nicest, I've found, is the ow brass. The CB tuba is [chef's kiss]
Also, I've listened to some of your other work after leaving my previous comment. Good stuff all around. I'm surprised you don't have more subs.
@@NailikNoteworks Thanks man. I'm most fond of the versatile horns a2, and the beautiful solo trumpet :)
I've only just started posting my music to TH-cam a couple of months ago and haven't promoted it in any way, just taking the blessings the recommendation algorithm gives me.
@@SipiOvaska For starting out just recently, it's not bad at all. 😄
Say, care for some critique exchanges? Share your thoughts on some of my work (fellow creator here. :D) and I on yours.
Best Boss battle theme I've ever heard. Solid remake~
0:57 What a banger !!! i need extended version only with this part 😍
i do a remix today on my chanel just cause im a big fan !! XD
Very good
Amazing work you did here SipiOvaskaMusic! i did some arrangments myself from ff xii as well. I was wondering if you could tell me which vst and additional plugins were used here. Also, is there any chance i could ask for the midi file (if u want i can send some of mine). Thank you and keep up the good work
I think it's all Spitfire symphonic orchestra, w/ chamber strings, percussion and harp. There's some light EQ on some instruments, and a little bit of reverb, saturation and multiband compression on the mix bus. There's really no special sauce there (the great libraries speak for themselves), and I'm not an expert on mastering so going into more detail probably isn't helpful :)
If you want references, you can find most pre-ps3 era Final Fantasy game notation data rips online, which are superbly useful especially with Sakimoto's complex arrangements. You can find them by googling "joshw psf2", and you can open them with e.g. a program called GMTrans
@@SipiOvaska thanks for your words! i was wondering... where do i find this GMtrans program?
@@andresaduriz4553 My bad, it's called VGMTrans. You should find it easily