Jun.29
2008
Goldbaby Moog v. AD free sample set...
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Goldbaby Productions, makers of the Tape 808 sample set, as well as a bunch of other odd yet extremely cool sample sets, has put up a free set of Moog MG1 (better known in America as the Realistic Concertmate) sound effects run through Audio Damage effects. You can grab it on the "Free Stuff" section of the Goldbaby site.

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Right on. I love the stuff that Hugo's been doing.

posted June 29, 2008 by shamann
Their other free shit is good too. The tape vermona is d-shiznit.

posted June 29, 2008 by inteliko
Their other samples are well priced and tasty as well.

posted June 29, 2008 by DGillespie
The "Tape Drum Machines Vol. 1" is my current favorite, although Tape 808 and Tape 909 get a lot of use. I'm using these samples a lot lately, and they'll be well represented on my next Micronaut release, Aoede, which should be done in a couple weeks.

-CR

posted June 30, 2008 by Chris Randall

WTF is this "round robin layering" they speak of? Are they referring to veocity layering?

posted June 30, 2008 by inteliko
I'm pretty sure round robin layering is when you take multiple samples at the same velocity layer and rotate which one gets played each time. That way when you do a sweet ass tarnce snare drum roll it doesn't sound like a machine gun.

posted June 30, 2008 by DGillespie
I'm very happy to see this. I'm a huge Goldbaby fan (as is evident from the "artist" and "testimonials" page) and I love Audio Damage too. So it was a very pleasant surprise to learn this morning that there is mutual admiration between the two! Psyched.

In addition to being a sound design genius, Hugo is also a total sweetheart .

- c

posted June 30, 2008 by beauty pill

when I first saw "moog MG-1 vs audiodamage" I was so hopeful that an MG-1 was going to be the first audio damage instrument plugin...

posted June 30, 2008 by MitchK1989
WTF is this "round robin layering" they speak of? Are they referring to veocity layering?

I use it to give some of my analog drum samples more analog feel... For example I have recorded 4 different samples from the kick sound on an old analog drum machine... Each of these samples sounds subtly different in pitch and timbre... Using the Round Robin function on Guru for instance means you can trigger those 4 samples one after the other either randomly or sequentially. In my my opinion this can help a sampled kit sound more analog... giving it more movement and vibe...

Hope that doesn't sound like some kind of voodoo... But I definitely like the results...

Shit I'm no good at explaining stuff... I hope I have made some kind of sense!

Regards
Hugo
Goldbaby




posted June 30, 2008 by huggie

Round-robin layering is exactly that. Same velocity, will rotate through 2 or more samples. So, as Mr. Gillespie accurately points out, your tarnce snare rolls don't sound too much like techno.

If you have velocity switching as well, you can easily get up to 16 or 32 samples per note. It is fairly tedious to make sample sets like this, as you can well imagine.

-CR

posted June 30, 2008 by Chris Randall

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