Flux BitterSweet keeps the controls extremely simple. There’s basically a single large knob in the center of the interface, with one end called Sweet and the other called Bitter.
Congrats, yet again Christine, it's really a good track.
But honestly, and with all due respect to Christine and her awesome track, I kinda saw it coming that even though it's been the 8th week since the charts been implemented, there been only 3 different people and tracks that made it to the top. http://www.soundgym.co/space/talk?id=NASZ2448MAR&t=DGC7YLBTJHE As I brought up my concerns about how the ranking seems to work and the possibility for an unstoppable supremacy of a single track reigning at the top a couple of weeks ago in that post I linked above, I'd really would like to hear others opinion on this.
Because, again with all due respect to Christine and her art, it seems very unfair and the more time passes increasingly makes it more difficult for newer submissions and other people to reach the top of the charts and get a chance at winning this award. The way the tracks are rated, every user being able to vote once for every song they like, and if rankings are based on total votes, there's almost no chance for a newer release to catch up with the lead or pass it.....
@Mark Phillip Marphy Horch You are 100% right, the ranking system is pretty strange. It's OK for all-time hits category but not for the weekly contest. Hope admins will fix it someday and scores will renew every week.
Thanks for the review Mark I'm glad you enjoyed it💪💯💯, I can see what you guys say about the snare/rim, maybe I could've given it a little more presence with some saturation.
@Zeti yeti did you hear the same as I did? tell me where it lacks panning? The it's literally swirling around my head like those birds and stars in a cartoon💫💫💫
Hi everyone, I'd like to share a really stupid trick I have devised for being able to determine the frequency of filtered noise. It seems one can, with better accuracy than you might think, match the sound of filtered noise by making a catlike hissing sound, like when a cat gets mad at you and goes CHHHHHH! 1000Hz is lips rounded, tongue to the back of the soft palette. 9000Hz is wide smile with tongue closer to the alveolar ridge. Everything in between is a continuum between those two positions. I used the practice white noise in the filter game to test this out.
I'd be curious to know if this works for anyone else. I have always liked to vocally imitate sounds, so it helps me to mimic sounds to understand them.
Can copy that and it should work for everyone else, too, because you basically making creating the missing frequency that is missing and filling that missing space or you are adding to the already boosted section and increase the resonance of that area! I think off Interval barks in Soundgym for a good training to recognize the resonance when you match the boosted frequency and either the full sound when you fill in the missing or hear yourself boosting it when comparing a cut to the original with filter off. I thought about using this method, too as it really helps me, especially with the cut frequencies, but It rather helps your ear to focus on resonances than to distinguish spectrum areas without assistance. Think of learning to ride a bike but adding support wheels. It can be very helpful and supportive at the first, but you should go on and remove them later or else you won't be able to ride without them.
Mar 22, 13:14