This track was made for someone else's promising independent videogame project. The project went horribly wrong, and I sat on an unfinished version of this track for more than a year. I finally decided to fix it today.
As you listen, picture…
This track was made for someone else's promising independent videogame project. The project went horribly wrong, and I sat on an unfinished version of this track for more than a year. I finally decided to fix it today.
As you listen, picture…
This track was made for someone else's promising independent videogame project. The project went horribly wrong, and I sat on an unfinished version of this track for more than a year. I finally decided to fix it today.
As you listen, picture…
I'm not sure if I'm happy with how the mastering came out but I figured it's time to let this one fly and get some feedback on it. I recorded the 'robot' voice using Audio Hijack Pro to record my Apple's system voice and then added some effects…
If you're gonna use speech synth in future songs (you should! nice processing), there's a simpler way to export the voice to sound files :
you can use the command say from the terminal.
say -v "Alex" -o ~/Desktop/speech.aiff "Hello"
The file will be saved to the desktop.
This track was made for someone else's promising independent videogame project. The project went horribly wrong, and I sat on an unfinished version of this track for more than a year. I finally decided to fix it today.
As you listen, picture…
Comments on Arnaud Savioz's stuff
Wow- that's so out of the ordinary that I don't even know why I like it, but I do!!
The unusual music, interesting combination of sounds
@montgomeru: Thanks. Everything is sequenced in this track, the sax part was written by hand and played with default Reason samples.
I love it! Who plays the saxophone?
Excellent! More of that please.
Like this, very nice!
Comments made by Arnaud Savioz
If you're gonna use speech synth in future songs (you should! nice processing), there's a simpler way to export the voice to sound files : you can use the command say from the terminal. say -v "Alex" -o ~/Desktop/speech.aiff "Hello" The file will be saved to the desktop.
Keeping a detuned sound under control like that really makes the track for me.
@montgomeru: Thanks. Everything is sequenced in this track, the sax part was written by hand and played with default Reason samples.