hello love your live 100% hardware, I have a live 100% hardware and maybe gonna buy a Vermont kick lancet, do you use a effect for the kick or is just the sound from the output of the Vermont ?kind regards Yoann
Thanks! The kick sound in this video is a combination of the punch and attack of the Tr8 909 kick and the low end of the Lancet. I used the eq on my mixer to blend the two and I lightly mastered the entire recording. So, yes this is basically the same sound I had live, but It's not purely Vermona. I think there are better kick units for live performances than the Kick Lancet. It has no MIDI CC and the controls are very sensitive. It's much more well suited as a studio synth for sampling and recording or as a "set and forget" sound. I ended up selling mine after a while because I felt I was not getting any new sounds. I really enjoyed it while I had it and I think its a cool bit of gear with a ton of usable sounds.
@@theoutsider1942 I've heard the octatrack is a challenge to learn, but very rewarding. Never really messed with either but sounds like a fun combination!
Love the 303 sound here. Do you high pass the 303 at all to work with the kick?? Any other processing on it? I use a behringer clone, still learning the ropes..
Nice tune! I still struggle with integrating the TB-03 into my setup :-D It certainly has its own sound/groove, clearly distinctable from a 303. Different, but in an interesting way and not as nasty as the TD-3. I do have all of these. Is that a monitors-version of a MixWizard? Cheers!
Would you say that the vermona kick is worth it? Like, a superior kick compared to others? I like the idea of a kick with no extra featues, just knobs. I can imagine that this thing is good fun with effect pedals.
It's been worth it to me. It's got a very Roland-esqe vibe but it's def fun to play with and can get pretty out there if you try. They are pretty inexpensive so I'd say worth it, esp if you just want a basic, tweak-able kick as you said.
Most of the kick in this video is the Vermona. I don't recall exactly, but the 909 kick from the TR-8 is high passed to just get the knock and a bit of the punch out. Everything sub 150Hz or so is Vermona. The Kick Lancet is very well suited to 808 style kicks as the core waveform is a triangle.
Short answer: The gear shown and listed in the title cost me around $1000. I bought the TR-8 and TB-03 new, while the kick lancet was used. You could get essentially the same set up for like 6-700 now, under 500 if you don't care about the Vermona and replace the TB-03 with a TD-3. Long answer: I've been slowly building and upgrading my studio and gear for close to 10 years now so it's hard to keep track of how much money I've spent. It's a lot. Just looking around the room right now and doing a quick tally puts me in the $10k ish range. It's likely way more than that all together. Eek... There is a fair amount going on off screen (Computer/Audio interface, some fx and a master sequencer/clock) and those things add a lot to the total cost. However you can do everything that I've done here with just the TB-03 and TR-8, which can be had for $2-400ish each. If you want to record it a computer is the best way but there are lots of options.
All of the tweaks and changes you do really take this to the next level.
Thanks so much!
awesome video
Great acid work...big like 😀🎶
Yeah!!!
P E R F E C T !
This is top notch. Love it.
No, this is knob touch !
I love it
wild absolutely loved it
Nice jam 👽
absolutely fucking brilliant!
Thanks!
REALLY NICE GROOVE! HOW DO U SINC THE MACHINES¿? WHO IS THE MASTER¿? THANKS!!
Thanks! This jam and most of my music is synced with a Squarp Pyramid.
hello love your live 100% hardware, I have a live 100% hardware and maybe gonna buy a Vermont kick lancet, do you use a effect for the kick or is just the sound from the output of the Vermont ?kind regards Yoann
Thanks! The kick sound in this video is a combination of the punch and attack of the Tr8 909 kick and the low end of the Lancet. I used the eq on my mixer to blend the two and I lightly mastered the entire recording. So, yes this is basically the same sound I had live, but It's not purely Vermona.
I think there are better kick units for live performances than the Kick Lancet. It has no MIDI CC and the controls are very sensitive. It's much more well suited as a studio synth for sampling and recording or as a "set and forget" sound. I ended up selling mine after a while because I felt I was not getting any new sounds. I really enjoyed it while I had it and I think its a cool bit of gear with a ton of usable sounds.
@@Deciboles what do You think if i buy a jomox mbase 11 ans Control thé CCI with the octatrack?
@@theoutsider1942 I've heard the octatrack is a challenge to learn, but very rewarding. Never really messed with either but sounds like a fun combination!
@@Deciboles I love my octa and I spent more than 50 hours on tutorials it is the brain of my machines
Love the 303 sound here. Do you high pass the 303 at all to work with the kick?? Any other processing on it?
I use a behringer clone, still learning the ropes..
I don't use a high pass, generally. Usually its a shelf on the sub frequencies and a bit of sidechain compression from the kick. Hope that helps!
Nice tune! I still struggle with integrating the TB-03 into my setup :-D It certainly has its own sound/groove, clearly distinctable from a 303. Different, but in an interesting way and not as nasty as the TD-3. I do have all of these. Is that a monitors-version of a MixWizard? Cheers!
Good eye!
cool
Uuuuuh ❤️
top!
Would you say that the vermona kick is worth it? Like, a superior kick compared to others? I like the idea of a kick with no extra featues, just knobs. I can imagine that this thing is good fun with effect pedals.
It's been worth it to me. It's got a very Roland-esqe vibe but it's def fun to play with and can get pretty out there if you try. They are pretty inexpensive so I'd say worth it, esp if you just want a basic, tweak-able kick as you said.
@@Deciboles thank you, that's all I wanted to hear!
THIS is how you acid.
Nice work! Is the TB-03 clock synced to Tr-8?
Both are syncd via midi with a Squarp Pyramid, which is off camera.
Not bad. That tb3 really makes weird sounds
Thanks! I have a lot of fun with that thing! haha
Delicious 😋
very nice! so the kick is vermona layered with a hi-passed 808 kick? can you get similar kicks to this just using the vermona alone? Thanks!
Most of the kick in this video is the Vermona. I don't recall exactly, but the 909 kick from the TR-8 is high passed to just get the knock and a bit of the punch out. Everything sub 150Hz or so is Vermona. The Kick Lancet is very well suited to 808 style kicks as the core waveform is a triangle.
@@Deciboles awesome, thanks. very tempted to pick one up soon
Yummy
Is that a flanger I hear on the clap?
I don't remember exactly, but I use a lot of flanger so it's very likely, haha
How much does a set up like this cost?
Short answer: The gear shown and listed in the title cost me around $1000. I bought the TR-8 and TB-03 new, while the kick lancet was used. You could get essentially the same set up for like 6-700 now, under 500 if you don't care about the Vermona and replace the TB-03 with a TD-3.
Long answer: I've been slowly building and upgrading my studio and gear for close to 10 years now so it's hard to keep track of how much money I've spent. It's a lot. Just looking around the room right now and doing a quick tally puts me in the $10k ish range. It's likely way more than that all together. Eek...
There is a fair amount going on off screen (Computer/Audio interface, some fx and a master sequencer/clock) and those things add a lot to the total cost. However you can do everything that I've done here with just the TB-03 and TR-8, which can be had for $2-400ish each. If you want to record it a computer is the best way but there are lots of options.
@@Deciboles cheers mate, great vid btw