Build a Clavia Nord Lead with Reaktor4

I’ve had Reaktor5 for a while, having snagged it in a promotion, in the hope that one day I might spend time to understand it and build my own instruments. I printed the manual for reading during trips and made some modest but slow headway in this manner.

There are no really good introductory tutorials for building your own instruments and FX in Reaktor. I’ve looked – they are all too shallow for my taste. I wanted a step-by-step guide to building a synth using different methods. Well, I’ve found one, and it’s much better than I expected:

Build a Clavia Nord Lead with Reaktor 4 (pdf) 

Yeah, so Reaktor4 it says, but it’s all valid and the perfect gateway for someone with a little synth knowledge to get their hands dirty with something useful. Really excellent.

The ensemble can also be downloaded for dissection: http://www.audionetwork.be/

Lifesaver!

This can of Kontakt60 has just saved me a lot of bother, and probably money too. I couldn’t find the much-heralded Caig Deoxit, but I was willing to give this austere-looking German version a go.

A tiny amount has solved my encoder issues with the Blofeld, fixed my jumpy dial on the XL-7, and rejuvenated the rotaries on an old Zoom guitar pedal. Everything behaves as new. In the Blofeld’s case it’s never been better. Magic stuff!

Tempest Recipes: Tom-Toms

Many varieties and sizes of tom-tom, but for our purposes they can be considered as basically snares without the snare. Electronic toms rarely sound close to the real thing, their whackyness often a signature. The function is what’s most important:

Tom-Toms are tonal instruments – that is, if they are pitched correctly relative to each other, they can play a tune. If they are tuned to the key of the track, you can play key chords with the Toms, which tends to provide a strong harmonic reinforcement. This is a phenomenon you need to hear yourself, but the recipe below should get you going.

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The OdoSynths Archive

If you’ve never heard of OdoSynths (where have you beeen?) then run straight away to The OdoSynths Archive and download these amazing VSTs for free.

This collection was lost and scattered after Odo stopped development in 2009. Since then there have been several attempts to locate many of them.

Then, just last week, Odo showed-up on KVR after all that time. I had to pounce on the chance, and ask him to resurrect his instruments. Unfortunately, he no longer had copies. So the call went out….

With help from KVR members (special props to Don and Spacedad), and of course with the kind permission of Odo himself, I’ve collected them into an archive that I hope will preserve them in pertpetuum, for the enjoyment of musicians and sonic explorers of the present and  the future.

FM synthesis nuts will find paradise with Six, DoubleSix, Purple, and Yellow – each fantastic and unique. There are also several drum machines – including sampler/synth hybrids, several excellent TB3030 clones, and a selection of the best SID emulations around.

Topped-off with beautiful GUI’s , this is a true treasure-trove for any synthesist. I bet you’ll be pleasantly surprised.

Welcome back Odo!

Tempest Recipes: Snare Drums

I’ll be honest – I’ve been fretting over this recipe for quite a while. I did a lot of reading and experimentation with snare synthesis and I had prepared a lot of background text on different snare types and how they might be approximated blah blah blah.

But then I came to a stark realization:  You probably don’t want to hear all this – it’s all on Google anyway – but more than that, although snares can be highly individual, the core snare sound is pretty standard and can be synthesized with ease. There’s no big secret. Once you know how to get the basic patch, there is a rich vein of snare variants to be mined from it.

In many modern music genres the snare tends to hit on the upbeat (beats 2 and 4) and serves to give a fixed focus to the entire rhythm. While other drum elements fly around, it is the snare that reinforces the sense of tempo. Thus the snare is often be the loudest instrument in the kit. It is an important reference for our ears. Changing the pitch of the snare can completely change the feel of a beat. To me, short and snappy snares make a rhythm sound more ‘urgent’, but this also depends on their placement.

Snare ‘ghost’ rolls are those barely-perceptible snare-hits in between that can add a lot of interest and variation to a beat without dominating. On the Tempest, the roll feature is perfect for real-time ghost rolls on velocity-sensitive snares.

Moving-on, for patching references we must define a standard. Our archetypal snare is a complex instrument. The stick hits an enclosed drum head, giving the initial impact transient which is then consumed by the rattling of the snares, producing a rich, noisy tail. But there is also some vibration from the second head which adds more subtle elements. Don’t forget that, these days, post-processing makes all the difference.  A snare without reverb rarely works.

 

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