I'm blown away by (a) the amount of thought you've put into exactly what features Decent Sampler needs and (b) how well those features have been executed.
This is so fantastic. I totally hope for a keyswitch feature in DS at some point, so you could change articulations or syllables within the midi. Thank you so much Dave. Your work is awesome.
If I had the time. I'd create instruments to sell. I need Irish Tin Whistles, I have, but it's so hard to play them perfectly. So I tried to create AI Instruments unsuccessfully. I'm gonna try again with more data. But the other way is your way. This video deserves more views.
Excellent! What a headache you must go through to produce all of this. Pretty awesome if you ask me! Question related to this. It is mentioned that the same setup is used for hi hat. Is there a Decent Sampler drum set in existence? EDIT: I think I found such a program. Jon Meyer and your video covering it. Wow!
This is a great video, thanks for making it. Serious question: if you can use the standard, non-legato samples to recreate the legato transition, why go to the trouble of recording legato samples at all? What's the benefit?
Well, depending on the playing style, the legato transitions really might sound way better. If the transitions are slow, you can’t add a lot of character to a performance. I personally usually don’t bother with true legato because I don’t have the massive amount of time required to edit them. 😂
@@DavidHilowitzMusic Is there are way to do a scripted (faked) legato? Also, one thing I've experimented with, with some success, is using something like Melodyne to split up sustains (or even a super small subset of recorded legato transitions) and repitching the second note. As long as you ensure the formants are corrected, you can get away with a lot! Especially since the legato transition is so short. In this manner, you don't have to record a million transitions.
I'm blown away by (a) the amount of thought you've put into exactly what features Decent Sampler needs and (b) how well those features have been executed.
This is so fantastic. I totally hope for a keyswitch feature in DS at some point, so you could change articulations or syllables within the midi. Thank you so much Dave. Your work is awesome.
I'm lucky that I've found this channel. You are one of a kind! A true gem
Now all that is missing is kontakt :) great videos!
This is an awesome tutorial - thank you for this, very useful and pedagogical
LOVE the breakdown
If I had the time. I'd create instruments to sell. I need Irish Tin Whistles, I have, but it's so hard to play them perfectly. So I tried to create AI Instruments unsuccessfully. I'm gonna try again with more data. But the other way is your way. This video deserves more views.
Thanks Dave, that was super helpful
very cool. thank you!
Excellent! What a headache you must go through to produce all of this. Pretty awesome if you ask me! Question related to this. It is mentioned that the same setup is used for hi hat. Is there a Decent Sampler drum set in existence? EDIT: I think I found such a program. Jon Meyer and your video covering it. Wow!
This is wonderful!! Is there an update for a kontakt version tutorial?
😍 YES PLEASE
This is wonderful!! Is there an update for a kontakt version tutorial? 😀😀😀
This is a great video, thanks for making it. Serious question: if you can use the standard, non-legato samples to recreate the legato transition, why go to the trouble of recording legato samples at all? What's the benefit?
Well, depending on the playing style, the legato transitions really might sound way better. If the transitions are slow, you can’t add a lot of character to a performance. I personally usually don’t bother with true legato because I don’t have the massive amount of time required to edit them. 😂
@@DavidHilowitzMusic Sounds like sample library makers will have to determine their own effort:quality ratio. I can appreciate that.
@@DavidHilowitzMusic Is there are way to do a scripted (faked) legato? Also, one thing I've experimented with, with some success, is using something like Melodyne to split up sustains (or even a super small subset of recorded legato transitions) and repitching the second note. As long as you ensure the formants are corrected, you can get away with a lot! Especially since the legato transition is so short. In this manner, you don't have to record a million transitions.
👏👏👏
how to do pitch bend in decent sampler?
The text based user interface seems like a nightmare. And we all thought programming a DX7 was hard...
what about Fake or synth-like legato and portamento, is it possible?