Hi guys ,
Loving all the great tutorials here on the site .
But I would like to see , if possible , a basic tutorial of sylenth1 , maybe in a techtip .
Thx in advance and keep up the good work
Did you watch all the videos?
There are TONS of Sylenth examples and tutorials.
I dont ask for a how to make that sound or how to make that .
Just a simple explanation of all the posibiltys and functions in Sylenth1 , I think allot of people would appreciate that.
A good solid basis in understanding the synth and not how to copy paste a sound
In there live Music Production Courses , they pay attention to it so why not with the online ones .
Thx in advance
no to sound like a douche bag mate. but try to mess with it .
if not try to read manual .many people ask the same question over and over and it is all about how much effort you put to learn your synth .
i will post a link wich they explain basic synthesis later on today
that might be helpful to you
it may be worth PM-ing one of the tutors to point out which tutorials
exactly have sylenth in it!!!
somewhere in nearly each tut there is sylenth programming.
the how to make tech house tut has quite a bit on sylenth.
they all talk you through what each function does.
overall, within all tutorials on here, there is probably about an hour an a
half of sylenth programming and how it works!!! you are not short of sylenth on here
my friend
alinenunez : that was very douchy haha
yeah your wright , it just with this site and all the tutorials I stopped trying for myself.
It was a good smack to the head thx
It’s definitely worth just getting your synth and twiddling its knobs!
Seriously, I was trying to get a dubby stab sound and it’s been eluding me for ages. So I went through the patches till I got one close enough and just twiddled away. Got to where I wanted to be sooner than I expected and learnt a little about basic synthesis too.
It’s also worth going through the different patches in Sylenth and looking carefully at each of the settings used - ADSR, filters, wave types, etc - then moving those knobs/sliders around. That’ll give you a good idea on how the different settings affect the sounds produced.