forumwanderer Posted January 21, 2022 Share Posted January 21, 2022 Hi all. I'm getting into Sound Design these days and there's a challange that I couldn't figure a way out by myself. There's this flute - gliding vocal mixture kind of sound that I'm trying to recreate and i couldn't do it with aforementioned types of sounds. Can you guys drop a guide or even a guessing so i can give them a try too? Here are the sounds with timestamps: https://youtu.be/BiBEheGyG5o&t=1m01s Any help much appreciated. Thanks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djsnake Posted January 22, 2022 Share Posted January 22, 2022 I would say, you might need a one shot sample sounds similar to that Lead. Find one and load it into Sampler, give it some Glide and there must be a setting there to make it looped so it doesn't sound like a pluck even if it is, use that too. Perhaps somebody with better knowledge would nail this that's what i thought.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
forumwanderer Posted January 22, 2022 Author Share Posted January 22, 2022 Well closest i could get is Flute sample combined with gliding Square synthesizer sound. Still not there. This one got me teared up some. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djsnake Posted January 23, 2022 Share Posted January 23, 2022 What about custom Serum Patches? They work like Sampler but gives you Oscillator controlled kind of sound. I'm not sure how to set up one but if you have Serum, you should be able to use an audio file as a wavetable for OSCs. That might get you there.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Nahmani Posted January 24, 2022 Share Posted January 24, 2022 I am not really hearing a flute in there. I would start with a lead patch and get as close as possible to the timbre. Then program the melody in and add some glide to the synth patch so that it behaves as in the example, taking care of which notes are overlapping (to trigger the glide) or not. Once you have the performance dialed in it becomes easier to hear the patch comparatively with your example and determine what needs to be tuned to get closer (attack, envelope, layering of oscillators to get the right timbre, etc). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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