View Full Version : glissando
ai6276
05-18-2007, 09:13 AM
i was wondering if anyone knows how to speed up any of the glissando patches in EWQLSO? speed them up to match tempo in cubase.... and also how to make them longer, and more sweeping......???..... they all are quick and not long enough.....
bobbyem
05-19-2007, 02:20 AM
Im not sure it is possible, i use the as they are. Just have to time them right, witch is abit tricky. If it doesnt work at all i make my own runs that is sometimes better because i can choose my own notes :-)
I hope there is a way to what you and probably many others want to do with the gliss samples.
Kostas
05-19-2007, 06:59 AM
..for harp you can create your own glissando, if you need for instance, a D dominant 7 (or 9 to be more suitable for harp) you can write fast (or slow) notes using accidentals as D natural, E flat, F sharp, G Flat (sounding as a F sharp), A natural, B sharp (sounding as C natural) and C natural. Actually, you can do a google and see how harp works and you can make your own personal glissando
Kostas
Jeff Hayat
05-19-2007, 08:19 PM
i was wondering if anyone knows how to speed up any of the glissando patches in EWQLSO? speed them up to match tempo in cubase.... and also how to make them longer, and more sweeping......???..... they all are quick and not long enough.....
longer, and more sweeping: multpile glissandos one right after the other, strategically placed
speed up: Create event, write note, Export Audio Mixdown, time stretch the resulting audio file.
Cheers.
ai6276
05-19-2007, 09:18 PM
longer, and more sweeping: multpile glissandos one right after the other, strategically placed
speed up: Create event, write note, Export Audio Mixdown, time stretch the resulting audio file.
Cheers.
what do you mean by "strategically placed"???:confused:
Jeff Hayat
05-19-2007, 09:36 PM
what do you mean by "strategically placed"???:confused:
Place them (the MIDI note data) in such a way that the different notes blend together, and make the transition from one note to the next seemless, so it sounds like one long gliss instead of multiple short ones. You'll have to play around with the positioning of the notes ro acheive this; patience is a virtue!
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