@@YT_Woodish Although I didn't chop them they are one shots that I sequenced. Also I'm not really liking the 2.9 sec limitation on 44.1 stereo. :( Maybe Roland can do something to give a bit more somehow.
Well, first off I would suggest to listen to a ton of electro and just try listen close to all the amazing sounds it has to offer. Try to mimic the sounds with any sort of synthesis you have at your disposal and of course try to come up with new sounds that are electroesque. Watch synthesis tutorials on YT etc. Lots of old gear or clones of old gear gets you there quick for many electro sounds, old drum machines(808 is at the top) etc. If you find a preset on a synth that sounds like a good electro sound then study it and maybe it will give you some insight to make more similar sounds etc. I don't really own that much modular gear anymore but that stuff can really help you understand synthesis in a hands on way. I am still always learning too since the 90's! I love it! Thanks for the listen!
For this one I used Behringer Pro 1, Roland VT-4 for vocal part, Oberheim TEO-5 and behringer UB-Xa D.
nice! So you produced them, then sent them chopped to the P6?
@@YT_Woodish yep.
@@YT_Woodish Although I didn't chop them they are one shots that I sequenced. Also I'm not really liking the 2.9 sec limitation on 44.1 stereo. :( Maybe Roland can do something to give a bit more somehow.
All 3 jams are superb. You should release a sample pack :)
What a splendid jam.
Great stuff !
Keep it coming ! Thanks. Kind of reminds me of Kraftwerk …
those drum fills are great!
thanks!
Dope
My body rocked 🎉
You are doing it. Playing. Word.
Nice
Cool groove! Nice to hear someone doing interesting tracks on the P6 instead of the usual bland stuff.
Thanks!
I am letting my body rock
I dig it!
🤩🤩👏👏👏
cool
🔥🔥💃🕺💃🔥🔥
This is cool, could use some 303 to take it to the next level
As someone whos trying to make electro type sounds. Any tips for sound design?
Well, first off I would suggest to listen to a ton of electro and just try listen close to all the amazing sounds it has to offer. Try to mimic the sounds with any sort of synthesis you have at your disposal and of course try to come up with new sounds that are electroesque. Watch synthesis tutorials on YT etc. Lots of old gear or clones of old gear gets you there quick for many electro sounds, old drum machines(808 is at the top) etc. If you find a preset on a synth that sounds like a good electro sound then study it and maybe it will give you some insight to make more similar sounds etc. I don't really own that much modular gear anymore but that stuff can really help you understand synthesis in a hands on way. I am still always learning too since the 90's! I love it! Thanks for the listen!