I tried your suggestions and I'm getting closer to the sound I want.
I wish ableton displayed all the analogue settings at once. Is there any plugins that do this?
Actually I was just making a joke. But good thing we have Internet Social Justice Warriors like you around to put people like me in their place with your cutting grasp of sarcasm. Your upgraded badge is in the mail.dented42ford wrote:Way to be totally useless! You have no sense of entitled arrogance at all. I am absolutely astounded at your level of humility, seriously, how do you manage?mholloway wrote:I'm shocked, shocked to learn that somebody who is brand new to music production and synthesis "can't get the synth sound [they] want."
![]()
No, you were not "making a joke." You were being a disgusting, condescending troll who contributed nothing to the conversation. I simply responded in kind - in this case, sarcastically - and then moved on to try and help the OP. You just stuck your proverbial head in and implied the OP is "a noob", and therefore "isn't worth helping". My grasp of sarcasm is just fine, thank you very much, but so is my grasp of common decency...mholloway wrote:Actually I was just making a joke. But good thing we have Internet Social Justice Warriors like you around to put people like me in their place with your cutting grasp of sarcasm. Your upgraded badge is in the mail.dented42ford wrote:Way to be totally useless! You have no sense of entitled arrogance at all. I am absolutely astounded at your level of humility, seriously, how do you manage?mholloway wrote:I'm shocked, shocked to learn that somebody who is brand new to music production and synthesis "can't get the synth sound [they] want."
![]()
Glad to be helpful.ccg123 wrote:Thank you dented42ford for the enthusiastic explanation![]()
I tried your suggestions and I'm getting closer to the sound I want.
I wish ableton displayed all the analogue settings at once. Is there any plugins that do this?
When creating sounds, try to think 'Organic' and think about how 'Organic' sounds are shaped. Basically, this means breaking the sound down to 4 main components I would call BOOM, BODY, BUZZ, EDGE.ccg123 wrote:Happy new year,
I am very new to the whole music production thing and finding it difficult to get the synth sound I want...
I'm using Ableton Live 9 Suite and the Analogue instrument. I've been playing around with the Filter Envelope on a single oscillator mostly.
But no matter what settings and devices I use, all my synths sound very 'buzzy'. How do I get a cleaner sound with more colour?
I don't know whether to tweak the Analogue settings or use audio effects to get the sound I want.
Any recommendations/suggestions would be very much appreciated.
Yes, this is good advice. I should have mentioned that my views on the Live synths don't in fact extend to the new ones that came with Live 9.5 as I haven't tried them.Teenage Engineering OP-2 wrote:Since you have Suite, you may consider using the new 9.5 synths, particularly Bass and Poli, as your primary synths, as they sound exceptional. Analog is capable, but I think those 2 new ones sound especially wonderful.
People have a different opinion what is good sound. That's a fact. It's all subjective. I really feel the Live synths suck and I've spent several years with them. When I did an honest comparison they didn't hold up. At all.Hektagon1 wrote:
The problem I find is that most people tend to look elsewhere for quality thinking that the Ableton stock plugins are not good enough when that is not the case at all.
Getting to know your tools inside out is the key to great sounds, not the latest gizmo synth with loads of impressive presets.
I'd agree with pretty much everyone here. This is totally subjective...as long as you're happy with the sound then it's all cool!Hektagon1 wrote:The Ableton synths are actually very capable and powerful. The only thing that people might find a bit intimidating is the layout at first but once you get to know it they are a breeze to use.
Analog in particular can sound really fat (try increasing the oscillators volume and adding shape distortion sym 2 or 3 on the filters and you will see) and warm and rival top of the range 3rd party vst synths once you know how to use it.
The problem I find is that most people tend to look elsewhere for quality thinking that the Ableton stock plugins are not good enough when that is not the case at all.
Getting to know your tools inside out is the key to great sounds, not the latest gizmo synth with loads of impressive presets.