T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2155.1 | What I have, what I need ... | NRADM::KARL | It's computerized, no thing c,an go wrong nothing c an g | Mon Nov 06 1989 14:41 | 18 |
| RE .0 - What I currently have for base sounds are my D50 which has
good slap bass sounds, not sure what else, and an ESQ-M, which has
some decent acoustic bass sounds. I own the VOICE CRYSTAL 1 cartridge
which has some pretty good upright bass sounds. The ESQ-M sounds are
good, but I'm looking for better in the accoustic bass department.
Gee, now that you've started this topic, let me throw one out ...
I have various needs for bass sounds and have been wondering the same
thing, where's the best place to get these sounds. What I'd really
like to find are some great accoustic bass sounds - like a good upright
jazz bass with that - not sure how to describe this - sort of a buzzing
sound, as you would get sliding a note on an upright - perhaps from
lifting your fingers slightly on the neck.
For my needs - the module could be a sampler, which I might be in the
market for, - or a sample player module or even another synthesizer.
Bill
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2155.2 | Go Analog Young Man | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Nov 06 1989 15:46 | 10 |
| There's the MIDIBass, of course, with a whole note devoted to it
(anybody got the reference handy?).
You can get some pretty good bass sounds out of those obsolete analog
synths - my MKS-80 (Super Jupiter) and JX-10 come to mind immediately.
A really good acoustic string bass is a bit of challenge for any
technology, though, especially the sound that Bill describes.
len.
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2155.3 | Hey, That sounds like what I need. | COGVAX::LABAK | | Mon Nov 06 1989 15:56 | 11 |
| RE .1
I have layered some of the bass sounds on my FB01 but it's just
ok. I want something that has a lot of presence. A sound that
someone might look up and say "Where's the bass player?". Karl,
my needs sound identical to yours.
Side Note:
I play bass on the keyboard with the left hand. I wonder what
other left-hand-bass keyboard players use?
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2155.4 | Little Red Box Works Wonders | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Nov 06 1989 16:30 | 18 |
| I once helped produce a cover of the Beatles' "In My Life" for a
friend. He played guitar and sang, I supplied drums, bass and
the keyboard solo. I made a dub of the instrumental parts that
I had sequenced for him to practice with. He called me a few days
later and said, "I didn't know you played bass". I said "I don't".
"Well, then, who'd you get to play bass on that tape?" "No one,
it was my sequencer and a bass synth". "C'mon, a guy I know who
plays bass said you nailed McCartney's part". "Well, yeah, I studied
it real hard to program it, but a machine played it, and the sound
came from my MIDIBass". "You'll have to prove that to me before
I'll believe it. And I didn't know you played keyboards too". "I don't".
"Well, who played the harpsichord..."
So, the night he came over to record the guitar and vocal parts,
I pushed start on the MC-500. "Well I'll be ...!"
len.
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2155.5 | VELBAS al the way!! | HPSTEK::RENE | LIFE -- It's a juggle out there | Mon Nov 06 1989 16:35 | 10 |
| I used my ESQ-1 in split mode for 3 years with the patch VELBAS in the
lower part of the keyboard. It's a very 'generic' sounding bass with
some presence, but also that full/mellow quality. I was never told
that it sounded like a real Fender Precision or anything but I have
had people come up to me and say..."hey that's gotto be the VELBAS
patch you're using for bass right?" 8^)
..so I promptly changed.....the patch name!!!
Frank
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2155.6 | Pro MIDI Bass | FGVAXX::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*282-1476 | Tue Nov 07 1989 09:38 | 12 |
| I had a MIDIbass (the newer, "ProMIDIBass" model) for about 6 months,
and really like it. I play bass with either my left hand or left
foot, whichever is easiest for the particular tune. I sold the
MIDIbass when I decided to "sell all my gear, and buy all new gear,
in the interest of simplification (my setup got unweildy after awhile).
There are MANY alternate sounds available for this unit, including
one called "GrowlBass" which is what .0,.1 is decribing I think.
They *are* good (the uprights), although the best "plain ol' upright"
I've heard was the Kurzweil 1000-series bass sample ...
-Jim
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2155.7 | Thanks so far. | COGVAX::LABAK | | Tue Nov 07 1989 10:33 | 7 |
| RE .6
Jim, since you sold the ProMIDIBass what did you buy to replace
it? How much does a ProMIDIbass cost? Would you mind giving me
a brief discription of the ProMIDIbass, like number of sounds etc..
Thanks
Rick L.
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2155.8 | 1681 | NRPUR::DEATON | | Tue Nov 07 1989 10:59 | 4 |
| There's a fairly in-depth discussion of this in note 1681.
Dan
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2155.9 | Kurzweil, you say? | NRADM::KARL | It's computerized, no thing c,an go wrong nothing c an g | Tue Nov 07 1989 12:40 | 15 |
| RE .6 -
Jim,
Was the Kurzweil 1000 series per chance the 1000-PX that I'm really
starting to wish I had jumped on?
I'm going to take a serious look at these Kurzweil units (looks
like it will be the new version going for $1K +).
The Proteus, Kurzweils, and Ensonique VFX are units I'm going to
be checking out real soon (checked out the VFX but don't remember
any great bass sounds).
Thanks!
Bill
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2155.10 | midibass O.K. with me | PCOJCT::RYAN | | Tue Nov 07 1989 12:58 | 17 |
| I like to lend another vote to the "pro" midibass. I also play lefthand
bass in a general business type band and have found it meets my
needs quite well. The ability to switch between patches based od
velocity is also quite usefull in a live situation, it lends a bit
of realism to the overall effect. As was mentioned earlier, there
is quite a bit of info around on this so read on.....
One thing of interest, I was not at all familiar with 360 Systems
when I bought the module and was concerned about reliability, I'm
happy to report that I have had mine for 1.5 yrs without a single
bit of problem. It did refuse to initialize once but the problem
was traced to low A.C. line voltage, a long extension to another
outlet fixed the problem. I'd be happy to send you a copy of the
owners manual to check out, give me a call if you'd like it.
Gary Ryan 8-332-3999
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2155.11 | my 2� | CSOA1::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Tue Nov 07 1989 13:29 | 26 |
| Funny Frank should mention VELBAS - it's my favorite ESQ bass patch,
too. An ESQ should function quite well as a bass machine - as someone
said earlier, the Voice Crystal I cartridge has some fairly decent
acoustic bass patches; the ESQ factory banks (on the net in MIDIlib)
have several variations of electric and synth bass patches, most of
which are quite good.
The Kurzweil 1000 sampled acoustic bass is *the* best acoustic bass
patch/sample I've ever heard. It does lack gain, however - meaning it
doesn't respond to velocity very well - and doesn't cut well thru
a mix.
For FM bass, I prefer a TX81z to the FB01 - the 8bit FB is just too
thin and noisy on the low end ... the TX has many very good bass
patches, and layering them makes for fat bass. Of course, 6op FM (DX7
series 1&2) have many very good bass patches available.
The Oberheim Matrix-1000 (or 6) also offer good fat analog bass.
Given the prices of the MIDIbass units (at least what they used to go
for), I decided against them long ago. A synthesized bass will usually
suffice for live work, and the additional capabilities often outweigh
the "imperfect" sound reproduction - especially if the unit is
multi-timbral (like the ESQ, TX81z, or Kurzweil).
-b
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2155.12 | | COGVAX::LABAK | | Tue Nov 07 1989 16:32 | 17 |
| RE .11
Brad,
I looked through the MIDIlib, only problem is I don't own
an Atari ST. Looking through the summary of sounds it seems there
would be enough ESQ-1 patches to last me a life time or as long as
I own the ESQ-1.
Does anyone have these on tape or in hardcopy so I could manually
enter them. Or is there any other way I could dump these down to try
some of the patches?
I did pull the hardcopy ESQ-1 patches out of Commusic but there
weren't any bass patches.
Rick L.
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2155.13 | Where's MIDIlib ... | NRADM::KARL | It's computerized, no thing c,an go wrong nothing c an g | Tue Nov 07 1989 17:37 | 12 |
| RE .11 -
Brad,
Could you point me to MIDIlib? Like, how do I access it! I'll need
specifics since I don't know what/where you are referring to. I
have obviously never accessed this before!
Or, just point me to a note that describes how to get there - I
did a search on titles but didn't get a hit on this one.
Thanks!
Bill
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2155.14 | Find a friend, & use keywords | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - boycott hell. | Wed Nov 08 1989 09:26 | 14 |
| RE: .12 (Rick L.)
Given that there are over 1500 ESQ patches in MIDIlib, I don't think
you'd want hardcopy. You don't have time, and I don't have disk space.
Your best bet is to find a friend (or fellow noter) who'd be willing to
let you borrow/use his (or hers, as the case may be).
RE: .13 (Bill Karl)
Do a SHOW KEY/FULL MIDILIB. I think it's # 17, but I don't have my
index handy, and forgot to do it myself before I ANSwered.
-b
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2155.16 | Why I sold my MIDIbass, etc. | FGVAXX::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*282-1476 | Wed Nov 08 1989 11:01 | 33 |
| Re .7
I paid, if I remember right, about $350 for my MIDI bass. I bought
it from a store that was no longer going to carry 360 Systems products,
so they were anxious to "dump it" cheap (I believe it lists at >$500).
It came standard with 8 sounds, there are probably over 50 additional
sound chips you can buy (1 or 2 sounds per chip) at ~$35-$55 depending
on the sound.
What did I replace it with? My old setup was something like this:
K1000 keyboard
D50 keyboard
HR-16 drum machine
ProMIDI Bass SGU with "MIDI Director" to do patch-changes
TX-802 SGU (2 spaces)
MV-802 mixer (2 spaces)
MX-8 MIDI "patcher"
Elka DMP-18 foot pedals
Alesis microverb
Carver PM-100 (1-space) power amp, + speakers, etc.
Lots (and I mean LOTS!) of MIDI, audio and power cables!
My new setup will be (when I complete it ...)
Korg T2 keyboard with onboard drums, effects, etc.
Technics KN800 keyboard w/on-board drum machine, effects, etc.
Furman 1-rack-space mixer
Elka DMP-18 pedals
Carver 1-space power amp, + speakers, etc.
A couple of MIDI cables, a *few* audio and power cables!
I'll be set up to use either keyboard as my bass sound generator.
I like things *simple*, well, I learned the hard way that I like
things simple!
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2155.17 | Thanks for the MIDILIB pointer. | NRADM::KARL | It's computerized, no thing c,an go wrong nothing c an g | Wed Nov 08 1989 12:04 | 20 |
| RE .14 -
Thanks Brad - I can't believe I never came across that library before!
I have to install a modem on my PC, and hopefully can access those
patch dumps ASAP. I could really use some more patches for my D50.
RE .16 -
Jim,
A little off the bass subject here ...
It's refreshing to see someone who's in less mode instead of more mode.
I'm still in more mode, and I can see that the cable situation could
get out of hand if I'm not careful. I'm trying to set things up
with 8 cable color coded snakes. Having just added an R8 drum machine
and using it as the sync master to my PC, I've come up with some MIDI
cable configuration problems that I have to deal with. I don't want
to end up with an unmanageable jumble, so I'm re-designing the studio.
Bill
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2155.18 | Less is more ... :-} | FGVAXX::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*282-1476 | Wed Nov 08 1989 13:10 | 12 |
| RE .1
Bill,
It took being in "more mode" too long for me to come to the realization
that "less is more", that "simpler/smaller can still be a good thing".
My setup is now smaller, weights less - - - now, if I can only apply
this same stragety to my body, trade it in for a lightweight model
:-}
- Jim -
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2155.19 | Less is not always more | NRPUR::DEATON | | Wed Nov 08 1989 13:55 | 12 |
| Actually, the term "less is more" can be a bit of a misnomer in this
case. In music, it is generally used to give the impression that there are
times when the overall musical product is more valuable if steps are taken to
"shave it down" to some bare essentials. But in the case of the current
technology available, while you may decrease the SIZE of your rig, you get more
functionality. What once took many synths to do can now be done with a single
unit (like the Proteus, for example). I suppose that gives "less is more" a
different twist of meaning. While the SIZE of the system may go down, there is
still ample opportunity to make the music "cluttered".
Dan
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2155.20 | basic basses | LEDDEV::ROSS | shiver me timbres.... | Wed Nov 08 1989 15:00 | 13 |
|
Electric bass: pick any synth.
Slap/pop : Velocity switch on a sampler.
Upright Acoustic: WITHOUT COMPETITION: DX7II string bass sound.
Dont know if it's a stock 6-op thing that works on orig DX or not.
Probably....that means choice of TX7 or TX802 for rack-ish deal.
It's just tooooooooooooooooo good. Trust me. Hear it.
rr
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2155.21 | Don't overlook the ROLAND D110 | CARP::ALLEN | | Thu Nov 09 1989 17:16 | 35 |
| re .0
This may sound a bit heretical but if you are looking for good bass
sounds on a budget you should at least listen to the ROLAND D-110.
I agree with Brad and others that the KURZWEIL 1000PX has a sweet
ACOUSTIC BASS, but as he mentioned it is on the soft side. There
are no good electric basses in the 1000PX (IMHO); you have to make
them yourself.
The more I use the D110 and 1000PX side-by-side the more I have
come to respect the D110. Its ACOUS BASS is not as clean as the
1000PX's but it does have the kind of characteristics that make
it stand out in the mix as the real thing. I really like it.
There are also a number of nice SYNTH and ELECTRIC basses on the
D110 that you would need to hear for yourself to evaluate. At the
going price, it might be a very inexpensive way to broaden your
palatte (and to get some new sounds, too :-) ).
Clusters,
Bill (Who is thinking he might sell his hard-fought-for 1000PX)
Allen ....
Nahhh!!! 8^)
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2155.22 | Try B4 buy... | WEFXEM::COTE | OK, who wants a Tangwich??? | Fri Nov 10 1989 06:39 | 5 |
| Before you purchase anything, try to use it in context first. I've
found that some patches that sound great alone get lost in the mix,
while so-so patches sound great.
Edd
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2155.23 | | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | ECADSR::SHERMAN 235-8176, 223-3326 | Sat Nov 11 1989 17:11 | 13 |
| I found many of the patches of the TX81Z to be excellent for this.
They respond well to aftertouch/BC and velocity. You can split a sound
into two voices and detune each slightly to get variety. The sounds
are not samples, sounding to my ears more natural over a range of
notes. And, there are lots of other features about the TZ that can
add flexibility and realism to the sound. The TZ is a classic and
under-rated box. It's really a shame that it has been discontinued
without a suitable, inexpensive replacement. In some ways, I felt that
Sal what's-his-name did the TZ a disfavor. He got great sounds with
the WX, but only by defeating many of the features of the TZ and using
other gear to add sound features.
Steve
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2155.24 | Nobody loves FM | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Mon Nov 13 1989 09:24 | 14 |
| It is sad that FM synthesis is so poorly understood. (The magazines
have been notably to blame here, for not having enough theory
articles.) Having owned both an FB01 and now a TX81Z, I would say that
the TZ's 128 factory sounds are lots better than the FB's 240 factory
sounds, and the TZ's architecture is much more versatile. But both are
capable of much more than the factory patches if people would just
dig into all those knobs.
At 100 parameters per patch, coming up with a usable TZ patch by just
noodling around with the "knobs" is not likely to get you anywhere
fast. You really have to understand the physics of the instrument you
are attempting to simulate, and think in the frequency domain. This is
an area not generally in a musician's background (unless they have
experience on an old Hammond organ with the "tone-bars").
|
2155.25 | Voice Crystal III EQBASS patch for ESQ-1 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Mon Nov 13 1989 17:55 | 22 |
| My favorite bass sound is the EQBASS patch on the Voice Crystal
III cartridge for the Ensoniq ESQ-1.
Perhaps I'm just different from everybody else, but I don't like
this metallic sound slap-bass type sounds. I prefer stuff more
like thumb picked "round" sounds (sorta like Chris Squire).
They blend in better with electric piano and guitar (sorta make
the bass sound like part of the chord voicing rather than a separate
part).
The EQBASS patch has a fairly realistic vibrato and "bends" pretty
well, unlike a lot of the slap sounds.
Anyway EQBASS sorta sounds like a VERY clean "direct" bass with lots
of tonal definition. The only complaint I have about it is that it
doesn't cut through very well which can be a big problem. Because
of this, sometimes I use EQBASS when the bass is very prominent
(soft section, moving bass, etc) but resort to the various slappy
basses when the mix is kinda of busy.
db
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