Not to mention those dudes at Patchwerks will hook you up with 10% off due to Memorial Day.
âDoes not sound goodâ = âDoes not sound how I want it to soundâ .
Which is fair enough, but subjective, and must be taken in context, eg, dude plays in nightclubs.
What ?
Ya know, I didnât realize it until now but youâre right. Heat MK1âs orange flame screen is really tying the room together, since I added Hydrasynth KB. The little orange encoder knob on the M:S helps too.
Thanks for posting that. I appreciate it everytime people post AB comparisons.
May have just found a reasonably priced AH second hand. Took quite a while of searching!
Because you live in Australia?
Correctamundo.
Patchwerks and Detroit Modular are always top notch!
For some reason it makes me die laughing at 03:46 when Stimming says, âBut somehow I like my equipment to look shabby.â while making this faceâŚ
Itâs always nice to watch videos like this from guys like Stimming who actually use their gear to create music.
âOkay and now it records!..And why doesnât it record?â
yep
when he talks about parts and never using themâŚi get it. parts are kind of tricky to make work in a workflow. but at the very least completely mangling your sounds and then reloading a part as a nice homebase is very useful. i do this after every single song. I also make use of two more parts in a live setting but those are for very specific contexts.
The bit at the end was clearly a shameless plug about the convertors. I meanI know the filter being selected at default is supposed to have an effect but nah, you donât that much analog bs. Just put it through an analog with filter feedback saturation like the minibrute, shameless plug. I did the same with the nord lead 2 and yes I would only play it through my minibrute filter as otherwise digital is by it self cold b/c itâs just a series of switches, and analog is a wave.
But playing back a sample I doubt an analog synth sample sounds worse being played back as I donât notice myself, but Iâm not a tuned ear, audiophile type. So I could be wrong.
I felt that for his characteristic erratic tangential style of presenting, the OT and itâs architecture might just be too complex. Its super fun with simpler instruments, but here the story got lost a bit. Or maybe Iâm just too biased
I like Stimming and the way he does his reviews. Also like his music⌠I donât think his âreviewsâ are planned to be like Sonicstate or Loopop, but rather for entertainment, at least that is how I watch them. I guess it is more improvised than scripted which I like, hence some confusion here and there, I have seen that in his other reviews.
To me it feels more human than e.g. the robot voice of loopop from the off⌠more informative but a little boring.
He does provide a nice overview of the device but itâs more his opinion than an objective review. I also think Stimming knows his shit pretty well, he has been using the OT for quite a long time. BTW, just saw there is a video of his last âliveâ show:
Yes, and I also think that his new review format for the âmodern classicsâ is not so much intended as an objective type of review like he would do for a new device, but rather as a more personal reflection on his experience and relationship with a machine.
More than anything, I want to hear his mastering gadget in action. A guy with those credentials and experience, taking the time to build his own hardware ⌠letâs just say I expect nothing less than stellar, and itâs Stimmingâs own fault for being so good at what he does
What is he good at? Making highly subjective but inaccurate reviews? DAWâless livesets? (no offense)
I like him. But I donât think he is VERY good. I think most of us could do what he does when one had the passion to do it for a living / had the time to prepare and the right people around us.
Want to buy his mastering unit though.