goosehorse

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

Bummer! Thank you for helping me get started with Lemmy, and good luck in your future endeavors!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

over the internet

I know this probably isn't too uncommon these days, but I'm fuckin impressed that y'all pulled off something this slick remotely

I'm old, love DOOM and Aesop Rock/HMM, so I appreciate the big vocabulary and tongue-in-cheek weirdness


keep up the good work!

Edit: formatting error

 

What better way to break in this community than with a mediocre picture of 2/3rds of a new PA?

I just wrapped up a little test session playing tracks from different genres to get a feel for the new setup. This thing sounds incredible, like having studio reference monitors in the venue. Plus, no more dead zone directly in front of the stage!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Great tune! I like that some of the pop-punk sounds from 20 years ago seem to be coming back into fashion.

Wonder if they're planning a US tour any time soon?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I'm not typically a huge fan of YouTube tutorials in general


I usually prefer reading


however, I've stumbled on this guy's videos before, and I really enjoy his work!

While mixing, I've been keeping a bypassed bx_solo (Plugin Alliance freebie) on my master bus, and I have it set to mono. Every so often in the mixing process, I'll kick it on to make sure everything is legible, and now I feel validated by this video.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm newish to the plugin space, but two that I've found myself using quite a bit are:

Analog Obsession's Comper

Comper is a compressor with both serial and parallel options. I feel like I've gotten better sounds from this than the official Shadow Hills Mastering Compressor emulations from Plugin Alliance. Of course, that could be user error


I am a lowly live sound engineer, after all ;)

Tokyo Dawn's Records' Nova Dynamic EQ

I just like the way this one sounds. Does what I want with a good spectrum analyzer built in. I intend to purchase the full version soon, but I've found the free version very useful in my mixes. On the mastering side, I leaned into rhe Kirchoff EQ from Plugin Alliance, but it seems a bit unstable and feels a little overkill on the mixes where Nova gets the job done just fine.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I'm late to this party, but you might appreciate the open source Axis and Allies engine called TripleA.

My step-dad was a big WWII history buff, and he had the pc version of Axis and Allies installed on the family computer! Loved it and occasionally fire up TripleA for nostalgia.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I've been exploring studio work this year on a small budget, and I've been able to get some pretty good sounds using ardour as my DAW.

That said, I've been using windows (boo, I fuckin hate it, can't wait to run out my warranty and get back to Linux) and plenty of closed-sourc donationware or gratis-tier plugins. The plugin selection in particular is where I've felt the limitations of FOSS for music production.

Some examples: Analog Obsession has some great donationware (I'm partial to the Comper compressor), and for free-tier versions of proprietary plugins, I really like the way Tokyo Dawn's Nova EQ sounds.

For open source plugins, I think Airwindows has some very interesting options!

Now, take my experience with a grain of salt: I'm coming from the live audio production world, and that's the material I've been working with. Since you're more focused on creating your own music in the box, you may not need the kinds of tools for which I've been reaching while trying to mix and master multitracked, full band performances.

Good luck!!!

 

I'm a live sound engineer, and when out-of-town artists ask me about my favorite local acts, this band is in the top two.

I've been bugging them about their album release for quite a while, so I was pleasantly surprised to wake up today to a message from one of the members letting me know it finally dropped.

MADRIQ is a supergroup of local players but isn't quite a jam band


the songs are more structured and the solos more reigned in. A lot of their material has a good dance vibe, but the band is decidedly rock-based rather than EDM.

While the genre is hard to pin down, I always look forward to mixing their shows, despite the large size of the band. Hope y'all enjoy Feelin' Right as much as I've enjoyed working with these folks over the past few years!