Tutorials on How To Write and Produce Orchestral Music by Alex Moukala: Official FL Studio Power User, Trailer Music & Videogame Music Composer. Trailer Credits Include: - Avengers Endgame - John Wick: Chapter 2 - BEN-HUR (2016) - Edge Of Tomorrow
in your professional opinion what orchestra vst has the most apreggio/animations options prebuilt where i can press 1 button and create instant magic? i just purchase the sonuscore Score... anything you reccommend taking a look at?
Hi, do you know how to do this in 2024? FL Studio 21, KONTAKT 7 and BRSO Articulate look very different, almost beyond recognition... Great organization tho! I'm hoping to get this setup to work somehow.
I was looking at pictures for panning in Google Images and the thumbnail for this video was there. I didn't realize it was going to be a video, but this was still a nice watch, especially being provided by you. While I'm unable to take your advice about the panning because I use Live's orchestra pack, I can kinda take your reverb advice.
I’m watching all your tutorials now, I can feel the obsession you need to get to this point, +150 tutorials and a different cover in each of them is just crazy, congratulations
I find doing the track delay in the instrument channel more convenient because any time-based effects that I add to the sound in the mixer is not negatively affected by the track delay (like say for example a sequenced gate effect). However if i have multiple lbraries that have different delays, then I will have to split them into different outputs in the mixer and add whatever delay the other library has on its mixer track.
I'm going to disagree with you about Edirol. Edirol has a lot of these features and still sounds pretty good. Tthere is a "free" download on the internet ,but I suspect its pirated from the discontinued Edirol VST. I may be wrong... But I cant find a legal version for Edirol any more, which makes me feel lucky I bought it all those years ago and still get to use it! That said you can find a lot of the sound libraries from Edirol on the JV1080 and the Roland cloud. Edirol allows you to set up 16 patches so you can set up Long bows, short bows, staccato, pizzicato and vibrato for string instruments. Its limited in its tonal pallette for brass and woodwinds, but comparitvely speaking, its good as a learning tool. I use it combined with Garritan personal orchestra to compose music (which is about £70 if you order it from their website). I also got myself into debt to buy Spitfire's Abbey Road One library, which ended up being a bit of a con as it has been called out for being a half finished library when it was released with no legatos... which Spitfire have now released as a £300 add on to the Abbey Road library! Luckily their BBC orchestra core is free, and that thing blows Abbey Road out of the water if you ask me! I bought FL Studio with the full plugin version upgrade and I recently did the same thing with Komplete as well, as it comes with orchestral libraries for free. I now have about £2000 of orchestral libraries, but I still find myself going back to edirol and Garritan to compose the basics and then import that into the more expensive packages to finalise. I should add that I'm not a professional composer but I am a musician and write symphonic metal, which I find rewarding... and I'm not talking about just adding a keyboard... I take pride in adding multiple layered string instruments to my music to sound as epic as possible. Patcher is amazing tho! I agree with your East West comments though. You can write a basic structure with free stuff and "polish it" by subscribing to East West to render the final versions of your work.