On Sat, Apr 05, 2008 at 12:22:48AM -0700, Ken Restivo wrote: > On Thu, Apr 03, 2008 at 12:56:31PM +0200, t_w_@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > hollunder@xxxxxx wrote: > > > > > > http://www.archive.org/details/woxitron > > > > > It's a fun track, thanks for sharing it. > > > > You're welcome! > > > > > I was curious about what else you got up there on archive.org and > > > snooped around. I listened to 'free' and was kinda blown away by the > > > sound. It's really cool in a way. > > > I wonder what treasures are still lurking there. > > > > Heh, thanks. Never thought anyone could be blown away from the > > sound of my old tracks, produced on a Korg M1 (1988-1994) :) > > > > http://www.archive.org/details/m1_free > > > > Back then I was always trying to get sounds out of the old lady it wasn't > > made for. That track belongs to a series where I was obsessed with > > more punch on the beats and bass bass bass, resulting in some rather > > unfortunate mixing :) > > I had no memory cards and no own computer, so making a new track > > often meant erasing an old one. After recording to tape, if I was happy > > enough with the result. Good times, nonetheless. > > > > Everyone's invited to dig for treasures, > > just click on my name after "Author" ;) > > > > Great percussion stuff! > > I have a question: where did you get your drum samples? > > Whenever I ask other electronic musicians about their great drum sounds, they tend to shrug and say, "use Battery". > > Of course, Battery is proprietary closedware, so it's of no use to me. > > Where do you (or anyone else) get great drum sounds? > > I've gotten a lot of mileage out of Hydrogen but the total of kits available for it seems to have topped out at about a dozen and stopped there. > I personally think that hand-programmed soundfonts with seq24 give a lot more flexibility than Hydrogen, but YMMV. James _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user