I remember David telling they couldn't recreate the long feedback on that high B note no matter what they tried, so they had to use the previous demo recording, that captured that long feedback, on the actual studio album. Also, they must have put the sound through Binson Echorec, I believe.
@@eugenegd2112 You try to look smart, but you don't know anything and you sit in the mud. Binson Echorec is very prominent on all Floyd records right up to 1979 The Wall. Only then David started to employ digital delay more. VCS3 synthesizer Pink Floyd received long before 1973. It was used on Meddle (One of these days, "Dr.Who" bit) and 1972 Obscured by Clouds record. Next time at least make an attempt to educate yourself, then open your bla bla. Class dismissed.
Hello, my question is the following: I only have the Arturia V8 with the V2 piano, so I don't have the V3 piano, and my Keylab MkII only has 49 keys, will your Pink Floyd collection work? with my configuration? I would like to be sure before buying, thanking you
Yes, everything will work fine! The only requirement is Analog Lab. Even if you didn't have the V Collection, you can import all of the sounds at once by importing the sound bank file into Analog Lab V. You owning the V Collection in this case means that you are able to open and further customize the sounds to your liking. Your Keylab 49 will play the sounds exactly the same, it just means that you have a few less keys to play.
@@AllanLoboVST Hi Alan, I just bought the pink floyd bank, I want to install everything at once in Analog LabV, I watched your video explaining version 1, but here it's version 2, I can't find it. not the file that allows you to install everything at once, can you tell us how to do or redo a tutorial for version 2? Thank you
There is absolutely no way to recreate this sound digitally. You have all the equipment right, but neglect that they sent the sound back through the monitors and on that particular note it fed back slightly. They mixed that feedback with the dry piano and that is the classic sound. What you are reproducing is the sound they use live
I see what your saying, but I didn't "neglect" the monitors and the feedback, it's just that there is no point in trying to do that whole process (for us). I'm not going for the exact same piano / exact same mics / exact same monitors / exact same cables / exact same room and exact same distance... My goal here is to teach people how to patch the sound with the gear they have. If you apply the same logic, there is absolutely no way to recreate any sound whatsoever. There's absolutely no way to recreate the Gilmour guitar sound because its not his Hiwatt, not his black strat, not pedals.... People will still do their best and be happy though
I remember David telling they couldn't recreate the long feedback on that high B note no matter what they tried, so they had to use the previous demo recording, that captured that long feedback, on the actual studio album. Also, they must have put the sound through Binson Echorec, I believe.
of course, binson echorec was very prominent in those days until 1973 when they got the vcs!
@@eugenegd2112 You try to look smart, but you don't know anything and you sit in the mud. Binson Echorec is very prominent on all Floyd records right up to 1979 The Wall. Only then David started to employ digital delay more. VCS3 synthesizer Pink Floyd received long before 1973. It was used on Meddle (One of these days, "Dr.Who" bit) and 1972 Obscured by Clouds record. Next time at least make an attempt to educate yourself, then open your bla bla. Class dismissed.
Cool. Always wondered about that piano sound. Classic.
Sensacional mano, parabénzasso! 🔥🤘👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Hello, my question is the following: I only have the Arturia V8 with the V2 piano, so I don't have the V3 piano, and my Keylab MkII only has 49 keys, will your Pink Floyd collection work? with my configuration? I would like to be sure before buying, thanking you
Yes, everything will work fine!
The only requirement is Analog Lab. Even if you didn't have the V Collection, you can import all of the sounds at once by importing the sound bank file into Analog Lab V. You owning the V Collection in this case means that you are able to open and further customize the sounds to your liking.
Your Keylab 49 will play the sounds exactly the same, it just means that you have a few less keys to play.
Wait until Monday to buy, it's going on sale!
Then if you have any issues, you can contact me at allanlobomusic@gmail.com
@@AllanLoboVST ok thank you very much for the answers
@@AllanLoboVST Hi Alan, I just bought the pink floyd bank, I want to install everything at once in Analog LabV, I watched your video explaining version 1, but here it's version 2, I can't find it. not the file that allows you to install everything at once, can you tell us how to do or redo a tutorial for version 2? Thank you
@@wilpas1050 Hey there! There is a file called "Floyd Keys Deluxe Soundbank" inside the Analog Lab V Folder, import that and let me know if it works
There is absolutely no way to recreate this sound digitally. You have all the equipment right, but neglect that they sent the sound back through the monitors and on that particular note it fed back slightly. They mixed that feedback with the dry piano and that is the classic sound. What you are reproducing is the sound they use live
I see what your saying, but I didn't "neglect" the monitors and the feedback, it's just that there is no point in trying to do that whole process (for us). I'm not going for the exact same piano / exact same mics / exact same monitors / exact same cables / exact same room and exact same distance... My goal here is to teach people how to patch the sound with the gear they have.
If you apply the same logic, there is absolutely no way to recreate any sound whatsoever. There's absolutely no way to recreate the Gilmour guitar sound because its not his Hiwatt, not his black strat, not pedals....
People will still do their best and be happy though
@@AllanLoboVST Sorry to be picky. You did a great job of reproducing the sound they use live
@@johnpeace971 also this can absolutely be achieved digitally.
You are good. Get yourself a 88 keyboard :]