This actually works with literally everything. Noises (filter out a little bit if it's too wide in spectrum), everything that can ring (pipes, springs), short pecussion like sounds (how about a rain of percussive tonal drops) and of course your own voice - the gratest instrument ever existed. And don't forget to apply a long fat reverb, resample it's tail and put it back into granular sampler. Add moving filters or rhytmic volume leveling to your taste. It is hard to stop resampling once you are into it! :)
Oh yeah instrument texture loops are wonderful. I am doing this for my big weird sound design library that I am planning to release at the end of the year! It's basically this, but with waterphone and all manner of horrific sources 🎉 similar to thrill, but just more wild and experimental
Learn the solfege system, start singing scales and simple melodies. I have a (hungarian) book that has simple melodies with solfege notation (+rhythm) only. Half of it is pentatonic, the other one is heptatonic. Try it it really helped me. Then after finishing nad mastering that book you can graduate onto singing melodies from sheet music. Truth is if you don't sing it will be much harder than it has to be. Good luck! ❤
Play each key in an octave 12 keys, over and over until you can hear what note will play before you hit it. At this point you can move your finger to any location and hear the correct note in your head every time. This is obviously very helpful and you will eventually be able to do this with more then one key and make cords. You might even get to a point where you can do this with your eyes closed.
One thing you can do to take it even further is to set it up so it starts playing in reverse once it reaches the end. Some of my favorite moments making music is doing that, playing a chord and just letting it play on its own for like half an hour.
I need me that instrument. (Harp? Dulcimer? Dropped my glasses somewhere, sorry lol) also what sampler engine is that? I heard the word falcon, which I plan to look up when I can see again. Thank The Lord for this google dictation thingie lol. Great work as always, mate ♥️🙏✝️ May He Bless and Keep you always ✝️🙏♥️
@@rushdown24 thank you for being my eyes, sweet friend!! (And I thank God I can see the comments coz I have the colours reversed but didn’t think to look at how to accomplish that on google until just now, so you get the credit for inspiring that, as well. I pray blessings upon you and yours ✝️🙏♥️
Hey, I believe the instrument in question is the dulcimer. Also, your comment is very beatiful, you strike me as a kind soul. I wish nothing but peace upon your being, may God bless you! ✝️🙏
@@mrazomor9299 How kind you are, dear friend :)) any good or kind or lovely thing in me Is The Holy Spirit, 1 billion googolplex per cent :)) I Wish His Best and Brightest Blessings upon you and yours, now and always :)) (and thank you ever so for the dulcimer :))) ♥️✝️🙏
@@mrazomor9299 agh I thought I wrote thank you but I can’t see it anywhere (I’m the girl with the panned vocals on my channel, you kindly gave me some great advice, hope you’ve been well my brother :)) ♥️✝️🙏
I think I will get that $10,- 2nd hand horn, cut the end off, stick it into a bath full of tiny balls and start hitting high octaves while recording it backwards via an old 1967 vintage speaker, connected to function as a microphone. Wouldn't that be awesome, now... would it?
you can sample a metal pipe and it could still sound good in a granular synth, after just playing back the recording of those randomly played sample, blurred and rendered and all it's pretty weird if you take a purposefully inharmonic sound though, but does work! great for horror niehhe
@@Beatsbasteln well, just to say any sound can be worth it then maybe worth for different reasons though, and I agree that when you want for specific reasons, the other sorta worth does not matter
I dropped a limestone rock and it went wlurururururur and I've never heard anything like it I'm pretty sure I need to go out on a day when the crickets and birds are silent and find that rock again and record it I can't stop thinking about that rock wlurururururur