i wonder in what category "how i make my claps tutorial video" falls (and why it appears in the left column^^) does "slop" requires that...
you guys do not understand the issue with it. poisoned milk remains an issue even if me and you do not buy poisoned milk because we only drink...
what´s the problem with poisoned milk? what is the problem with overpriced cow milk pretending to be goat milk?
it is not exactly fuzz or (guitar) distortion effect you want, it is more the sound of the clipping in an analog mixer.
exactly. and also the frequency filtering and the amplitude decrease must have the right relation to each other. well, the OP asked for...
you forgot to add that you also do not want articles and advertising to be reproduced or linked here.
i think he tries to dispel the prejudice that someone who offers a creative software for money is automatically entitled to some own creativity...
among the young generation they often have no opportunity to compare. but whatever, as "cool" as vinyl is, i somehow regret that digital media...
or just stop buying plug-ins.
the original post by pulse wave was weird enough, as he is obviously the last person on this planet who leanred about vinly coming back and thinks...
well, if the enduser does not hear if it good or bad, why bother are about the DSP code...
nope, that was 2005.
that is how it is done since quite some years. unreal engine among others offer parts of it. it is quite some work to do it for every wall though. :)
the main issue with the existing distance filters is that they offer meters where you would need miles for your application. and one cant just...
i made a "distance" filter VST a decade ago but it is not something you would use everyday. it is a butterworth lowpass, its output is mixed...
still difficult to grasp what exactly you mean, as well as what you do. but yes, it sounds of course different than your speakers in a room....
"distance" is more or less a lowpassfilter and a delay - relative to other sound sources. so to model the nature is really easy here and there is...
yes please, let´s first finish the question. ;)
one could think that the more simple structured a piece of music is, the higher is the chance that its composer used copy and paste in some form...
rarely agree with deadmau, here i do.
Separate names with a comma.