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Production, EQ, Masterization, etc.

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Sound FX

Exportar Configuraciones y Ajustes CUBASE. Si usted desea copiar la configuración actual de Cubase/Nuendo a otro ordenador es necesario copiar la carpeta de preferencias al nuevo ordenador. En la carpeta de preferencias de Cubase/Nuendo se encuentran guardados los ajustes y la configuración de usuario. En este artículo también encontrará una lista con todos los archivos que se encuentran dentro de la carpeta de preferencias y los ajustes que estos guardan. Nota: Puede ser que algunos de los archivos listados abajo no estén disponibles en Cubase Essential/Studio/Artist/AI/LE. Así encuentra el folder de preferencias: Mac OS X"/Users/<su nombre de usuario>/Library/Preferences/[Programa]"PC Windows XP"Disco duro\Documents and Settings\<su nombre de usuario>\Application data\Steinberg\[Programa]"PC Windows Vista / Windows 7"Disco duro\Users\<su nombre de usuario>\AppData\Roaming\Steinberg\[Programa]" En Windows este folder se encuentra oculto.

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Music Production

Key Of Grey. Music Software Training & Ableton Tutorials. Music Production, Mastering, Mixing, Recording | Techniques, hints and tips. VST Plugins. Adventus VSTI synthesizer is easy to use for beginner or pro synth players, you will be totaly inspired by the sound and the presets when come the time to create or play music. 6 Oscillators with Fat options. Waveforms: Saw, Sine, Triangle, Pulse, Ramp, White Noise. Portamento Controls. Volume control, Fine-tune, Semi-tune, Pulse Width, Phase Modulation, Velocity sensitivity, key follow. 6 Resonant Filters: 12dB, 24dB, Moog Filter Types: 3 diferents Low Pass, High Pass, Band Pass, Band Reject ADSR’s with parameter locking facility Amplifiers with controls for Attack, Decay, Sustain, Release Modulation with substantial routing options: 2 assignement with 2 destinations each. 2 x LFO’s with substantial routing options Mode, Range, Beat Step Sequencer with control for Pitch, Filter, and FX paremeter, Phase Modulation option.

Effects: Chorus, Twin Delay, Reverb, Drive (Distortion) Sound Types. FindSounds Search the Web for Sounds What types of sounds can be found on the Web using FindSounds? Below is a partial list. Click on any link below to perform a search, or enter one or more words in the search box above and then click on the Search button. Animal Sounds alligator, baboon, bat, bear, bobcat, buffalo, bullfrog, camel, cat, cheetah, chimpanzee, chinchilla, chipmunk, cougar, cow, coyote, crocodile, deer, dinosaur, dog, dolphin, donkey, elephant, elk, ferret, fox, frog, gibbon, goat, gorilla, grizzly bear, guinea pig, hippo, horse, hyena, jaguar, kitten, lamb, lemur, leopard, lion, llama, marmot, monkey, moose, mouse, orca, panda, panther, pig, polar bear, prairie dog, puppy, rabbit, raccoon, rat, rattlesnake, rhinoceros, rodent, sea lion, seal, sheep, snake, squirrel, sugar glider, tiger, toad, whale, wolf, zebra Insect Sounds bee, cicada, cricket, insects, katydid, mosquito, wasp.

Audio and production tutorials, from beginner to advanced | Audiotuts+ Technology - Audio - How to Make Featured Instructables. How To Fix (Almost) Any Set of Audio Speakers Home Hacks | Apartment Therapy Unplggd. Previous image Next image A multi-part series, today we are going to show you how to breathe new life into an old pair of speakers. It is a commonly held belief that the newer speakers and audio equipment get, the better they are. This is not always the case and sometimes, even when your speakers are damaged, there is sonic power left in them that modern equipment can’t match…From time to time we show you something antique that still competes with today’s technology.

Today we restore an old pair of Bose 301’s that we picked up at a thrift store for $5 or so. Did you know that they make repair kits for those surrounds? What You Need Here is everything that comes in the kit. Uggh! Instructions 1. 2. Just remember that it was attached with glue in the first place, so no biggie to glue it back yourself. 3. 4. 5. Next time we'll show you how those shims fit and actual gluing up of the foam surrounds. (Images: Peter Treadway) How to Build the CMoy Pocket Amplifier. Chu Moy designed a very popular headphone amplifier that’s easy to build, and it can be built small enough to fit in a pocket, power supply and all. It’s powerful enough to drive very inefficient headphones to thunderous volumes from even weak sources, and it sounds excellent considering that you can build a bare-bones CMoy amp for just US$20, and a pretty nice amp for under $50.

Considering that the cheapest of the worthy commercial amps is $100 and most of them are in the $200+ range, this is a very worthwhile cost difference. For these reasons, I think that the CMoy pocket amplifier is an ideal project to get started in audio DIY. This article is written for the beginner DIYer, though if you just want a guide to building this particular amp, you can skip to the parts or assembly sections. If you are a raw newbie and don’t yet have any tools, see the companion article, Getting Started in Audio DIY. How-To: Easily Remove the Vocals from Most Songs | r3dux.org. 2015 Shortcut: When I wrote this article Audacity didn’t have an automatic center-panned vocal canceling effect… but now it does, so rather than do the stereo-separate / invert-one-track / play-both-as-mono trick (and that’s pretty much all there is to it), you should be able to find the Vocal Remover option in the Effects menu – but it’s more fun / interesting and can give better results if you do it yourself!

=D I found this trick the other day whilst stumbling the Interwebs and thought I’d do a quick-write up w/ pictures to make it as easy as possible… For this exercise we’re going to be using a piece of free audio software called Audacity, which you can get for Linux, Windows and Mac. Update: If you’re trying this out on a Mac, please make sure you get Audacity 1.3 Beta or newer – the stable 1.2 version appears to have a missing equaliser decibal-range slider which you need towards the end of the process! 1.) Import Some Audio 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) Wrap Up Cheers! Culture Vaults : Resonant Frequencies and the Human Brain.

One of the great revelations of 20th century science is that all existence can be broken down into simple wave functions. Every photon, energy emission, and elementary particle rings with its own unique wave signature. When we see a color, we are actually seeing a distinct frequency of visible light. When we hear a sound, our eardrums are actually being vibrated by subtle waves in the air molecules around us. Even the neurochemical processes of human consciousness ­ our very thoughts ­ ring with their own distinct wave patterns. By studying the way that waves interact with other waves, researchers have found that even low-powered oscillations can have enormous effects on standing waves, physical structures, and even the human brain. The principle which describes this particular wavelength interaction is known as resonance.

When you resonate with something, you are emitting a wave signature which is "in sync" with it. "The principle cannot fail," Tesla would say. Monroe's Big Discovery.