And I need to thank you sincerely for being my second set of ears while building this one. Thanks for helping me get here as well as helping me back away from what could have been a few missteps
Thank you very much! This was my attempt at creating a musical interpretation of the environment in and around LOTR's Mt. Doom. The ideas just poured out of me and this ended up being one of the quickest patches I've ever built on the wavestate. I'm glad you stopped by to take in this session. It's something I'm wildly proud of. 😊
Thank you very much! It always means a lot to hear from someone that something I've made is inspiring. Thank you again for stopping by and for the feedback on this, as it's something I'm very proud of 😊
Thank you very much! Believe it or not, there aren't any string samples in this patch. I decided to take some samples and sort of stretch them beyond their usual ranges to see how they'd mutate. I definitely hear strings, but I'm glad a second set of ears does as well 😊
Thank you so much! This is one I’m exceedingly proud of and I’m looking at a few more environments from LOTR to sort of make a series of sounds starting from here. Lothlorien is next on the list and I’m already dreaming up the soundscape
Thank you so much! This comment is extremely, and genuinely, flattering and it means a lot to hear that what I do is something that other people would like to try for with their own instruments. On that note, stay tuned in the near future because I'm planning a stream of building one of my patches from scratch to a finished piece that would be video-ready. Just waiting for the right idea, and I have a few things remaining to get in order with my current life circumstances before I can commit to anything long-form on here.
Great stuff as always. After talking to you I added the Modwave to my synth collection. I'm going to try and learn that one before the wavestate. No clue how you make the wavestate sound this way. You are a true master. Stay well!
Thank you so much on the compliment on this work as well as my work as a whole with the wavestate. It means so much to hear something like that from listeners/viewers. I hope the modwave will serve you well, and it really is a great way to end up learning (sort of) how the wavestate's architecture works as they're virtually identical minus the sequencers. It helps that you'll be working with straight-up wavetable synthesis on the modwave instead of the wavestate's concatenative synthesis, because wavetables are just easier by default than chaining sounds together. I'm working on some glitchy, angry, just... nasty noises on the modwave at the moment and I look forward to sharing them soon 😊
❤❤❤
One of my new favorites for sure. You’ve found a way to make something so noisy feel empty and desolate.
And I need to thank you sincerely for being my second set of ears while building this one. Thanks for helping me get here as well as helping me back away from what could have been a few missteps
You went dark and ambient on this one 👽👽The IRed color works well with this.
Thank you very much!
This was my attempt at creating a musical interpretation of the environment in and around LOTR's Mt. Doom. The ideas just poured out of me and this ended up being one of the quickest patches I've ever built on the wavestate.
I'm glad you stopped by to take in this session. It's something I'm wildly proud of. 😊
It is inspiring how much emotion you pull from one instrument. Well Done..❤
Thank you very much!
It always means a lot to hear from someone that something I've made is inspiring.
Thank you again for stopping by and for the feedback on this, as it's something I'm very proud of 😊
This sounds so deep. Love the way this builds with the strings and choir. Brilliant!
Thank you very much!
Believe it or not, there aren't any string samples in this patch. I decided to take some samples and sort of stretch them beyond their usual ranges to see how they'd mutate.
I definitely hear strings, but I'm glad a second set of ears does as well 😊
That was really cool
Thank you sir!
Really glad you enjoyed it and it was nice to be able to discuss it further together after you'd listened to it 😃
One of your best! Love this very much.
Thank you so much! This is one I’m exceedingly proud of and I’m looking at a few more environments from LOTR to sort of make a series of sounds starting from here. Lothlorien is next on the list and I’m already dreaming up the soundscape
I wish I knew how to make my Wavestate perform like this. It's just great.
Thank you so much! This comment is extremely, and genuinely, flattering and it means a lot to hear that what I do is something that other people would like to try for with their own instruments.
On that note, stay tuned in the near future because I'm planning a stream of building one of my patches from scratch to a finished piece that would be video-ready. Just waiting for the right idea, and I have a few things remaining to get in order with my current life circumstances before I can commit to anything long-form on here.
Great stuff as always. After talking to you I added the Modwave to my synth collection. I'm going to try and learn that one before the wavestate. No clue how you make the wavestate sound this way. You are a true master. Stay well!
Thank you so much on the compliment on this work as well as my work as a whole with the wavestate. It means so much to hear something like that from listeners/viewers.
I hope the modwave will serve you well, and it really is a great way to end up learning (sort of) how the wavestate's architecture works as they're virtually identical minus the sequencers. It helps that you'll be working with straight-up wavetable synthesis on the modwave instead of the wavestate's concatenative synthesis, because wavetables are just easier by default than chaining sounds together.
I'm working on some glitchy, angry, just... nasty noises on the modwave at the moment and I look forward to sharing them soon 😊
@@dani_raudvik Can"t wait to hear your new work!!