Welcome to %s forums

Stay up to date on Hardstyle and Hardcore parties, releases, free/unreleased tracks, DJ mixes, how to produce and much more. International Hardstyle forum

Login Register

General Lead-Recreations Tuts Topic!

For all Hardstyle tutorials regarding DJ'ing and Producing
Forum rules
The tutorial section is for finished tutorials meant to help others.
Don't create topics asking questions, use the Sound Design or Software/Hardware section instead.
Post Reply
adaox
Artist
Posts: 10
Joined: 05 Aug 2011, 14:56

Re: General Lead-Recreations Tuts Topic!

Post by adaox »

a lead in the style of wasted penguinz, could make it better if i invested more time but hey... free preset included.

User avatar
Krystal
State Outsider
Posts: 5
Joined: 23 Apr 2013, 11:49
Contact:

Post by Krystal »

@adaox rly nice :) !


User avatar
Almanac
State Native
Posts: 967
Joined: 16 May 2010, 16:23

Post by Almanac »

Does anyone know how to make that screaming lead at 2:31?



It sounds like some sort of hard sync lead with a filter and pitch envelope that opens up the sound, portamento to make the sound glide and then a large release on the pitch envelope to make it fall again. I got pretty close, got some buzziness and the basic shape, but I for the life of me can't figure out how to make the lead "scream". I've tried a bunch of stuff, WOW filter, distortion, making it in Omnisphere, Massive, and Sylenth but the sound is never even close to what he made!

User avatar
Black-Out
State Senior Citizen
Posts: 267
Joined: 11 Feb 2010, 18:47
Contact:
Netherlands

Post by Black-Out »

What about this lead @2:14? Is this a kind of glide ore pitch? Can someone tell me maybe? A trick that a lot of producers use this days. :)

Embrace the Classic sound!
https://soundcloud.com/crudeness

User avatar
Cardioid
State Native
Posts: 947
Joined: 03 Feb 2012, 22:14
Location: Noordwijk ZH
Netherlands

Post by Cardioid »

Black-Out wrote:What about this lead @2:14? Is this a kind of glide ore pitch? Can someone tell me maybe? A trick that a lot of producers use this days. :)

Well, it can be achieved either way... But this sounds more like a known ''tape stop'' to me. On very low settings, though. You can easily get that effect going on in dBlue Glitch (which is free if i'm not mistaking) and select the 'tape stop' effect to your own likings and use it where needed.

On the other hand, you could also just record your sample, and make the sample pitch down till zero, and you've got almost the same effect. But I prefer doing this trick with the dBlue Glitch, because if you pitch a waveform down, your waveform becomes longer, and you can get clicks when you got to the lowest pitching point and you pitch it back up after it.

And with slide notes you can do it too, but i don't think the typical tape stop effect can be achieved.. It probably will sound a bit different.

GL. :)
Image
Image
Image

User avatar
battlejellyfish
State Retired Person
Posts: 15586
Joined: 23 Jul 2010, 14:27
Hungary

Post by battlejellyfish »

I gave a try about redoing Get Loose... :P



I know the reeverb is shitty a little bit, just ignore that :D (MIDI file will be available in my next pack, if someone's interested)

Lost Frequency
State Outsider
Posts: 6
Joined: 10 Feb 2013, 17:21

Post by Lost Frequency »

Sounds good :) a little bit more tweaks on the reverb :P

i remake the travelling lead by coone & scope dj

https://soundcloud.com/lostfrequencymus ... lling-lost

Mitta
State Newcomer
Posts: 11
Joined: 16 Jun 2013, 12:25

Post by Mitta »

At The Convicted, how did you make that bending sounds on the lead?

User avatar
Detektor
State Tourist
Posts: 52
Joined: 01 Jul 2012, 12:44

Post by Detektor »

You can do that in many different ways, using portamento, pitch bend, or a tapestop emulation (glitch, effectrix, artillery).

Mitta
State Newcomer
Posts: 11
Joined: 16 Jun 2013, 12:25

Post by Mitta »

What is the most common way to do it? I tried it with the tapestop but It dídn't work that well.. I've tried different settings but can't get the effect quite right

Post Reply

Return to “Tutorials”