Author
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How to timestretch snare sample ?
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Conny
IsraTrance Senior Member
Started Topics :
224
Posts :
149
Posted : Feb 9, 2008 19:31
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Hi !
I would like to timestretch a snare sample so it becomes quite long.
But i have the problem that it sounds weird after it has been timestretched.
I want it to be 0,230 seconds song and have timestretched it in soundforge with has has given me bad result.
Anyone who can me give me some advice or recommend a good timestretching program which i can use. |
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shachar
Basic
Started Topics :
13
Posts :
402
Posted : Feb 9, 2008 22:15
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maybe the things your looking for is reverb to longer the tail of the snare |
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pavaka
IsraTrance Full Member
Started Topics :
87
Posts :
805
Posted : Feb 9, 2008 23:47
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Conny
IsraTrance Senior Member
Started Topics :
224
Posts :
149
Posted : Feb 10, 2008 17:31
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Thanx a lot for your help.
Managed ro get right length just by lowering the tempo of my song and then exported.Believe lowering the pitch can also help a lot and using reverb aswell |
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Inner Demon
Started Topics :
6
Posts :
321
Posted : Feb 10, 2008 18:22
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I wouldn't timestretch a snare sample. It's a hit, obviously its going to sound weird then.
Dunno, I saw your other thread about hats and milliseconds etc... I think you're going about these things the wrong way.
Like others have said, just try to find good samples to start with, then stick them in sampler so you can adjust the envelopes for snappiness etc and put on reverb, use tuning, and maybe some filter/eq/flanger/short delay/whatever... but it really shouldn't be necessary to do direct audio manipulation like timestretching....
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Disciple
IsraTrance Junior Member
Started Topics :
23
Posts :
85
Posted : Feb 11, 2008 00:07
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Quote:
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On 2008-02-10 18:22, Inner Demon wrote:
I wouldn't timestretch a snare sample. It's a hit, obviously its going to sound weird then.
Dunno, I saw your other thread about hats and milliseconds etc... I think you're going about these things the wrong way.
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I'd disagree there, developing your own style is important as different people use equipment in different ways. there isnt a right and wrong way to do it, its just what you like the sound of in the end result that counts. For myself and many people trial and error experimentation is the best way to find out how to use tools to best suit our creative needs. (the way i would do it would be to limit heavily the snare with a reverb until its max volume is at least the length that you need, then trim the end off and apply a suitable envelope to make it sound less abrupt).
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Suncontact
Started Topics :
3
Posts :
4
Posted : Feb 11, 2008 00:30
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Do u want to use it as an effect or wanna make the sample fit into the track?
If it is the second one, maybe u can find a sample that fits perfect or at least better without a lot of twisting |
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e-motion
IsraTrance Full Member
Started Topics :
71
Posts :
933
Posted : Feb 11, 2008 14:44
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i've stretched snare samples and they sound good but not as a snare... as something else. experimenting is the way    Pyrex :: Traveling without moving
www.myspace.com/pyrexperience |
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Elad
Tsabeat/Sattel Battle
Started Topics :
158
Posts :
5306
Posted : Feb 12, 2008 16:16
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Quote:
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On 2008-02-10 18:22, Inner Demon wrote:
I wouldn't timestretch a snare sample. It's a hit, obviously its going to sound weird then.
Dunno, I saw your other thread about hats and milliseconds etc... I think you're going about these things the wrong way.
Like others have said, just try to find good samples to start with, then stick them in sampler so you can adjust the envelopes for snappiness etc and put on reverb, use tuning, and maybe some filter/eq/flanger/short delay/whatever... but it really shouldn't be necessary to do direct audio manipulation like timestretching....
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+1
the one thing that i do mathematicly and not just by ear is to make sure that instruments not overlapping themselves , other then that i tune envelope by ear  www.sattelbattle.com
http://yoavweinberg.weebly.com/ |
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