Making a Bassline with the Rene 2 and Tonestar 8106

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Let's drop some classic basslines with the Studio Electronics Tonestar 8106 and the Make Noise Rene 2. These are super fun and easy, and sound great. You don't need a Tonestar 8106, really any subtractive synth voice with 2 oscillators that can do saw or square wave will work. The delay adds some magic so don't miss that too.
0:00 Intro
0:50 Programming the kick
1:14 Where the bassline fits
2:05 Setting up Rene for the right rhythm
4:30 Syncing with a start/reset trigger
7:17 Sound design with the Tonestar 8106
9:17 Adjusting kick decay
10:19 Bouncing the octave
12:29 Doing a driving/rolling bass instead
#eurorack #tutorial #bassline #tonestar8106 #rene2

Пікірлер: 8

  • @grosun
    @grosun3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Nice thoughtful tutorial, and good to hear the Tonestar 8106 in action; not many people have shown off what it can do, and it sounds great here.

  • @alexbarn
    @alexbarn4 жыл бұрын

    Again, great tutorial. (Weird how Rene doesn’t provide a settings option to change this start/reset behavior though.)

  • @antikytheramechanism7909
    @antikytheramechanism79094 ай бұрын

    RIght, Rene is experimental and Rene almost hopes your idea won't work, whatever it is. The truth is that Vector will do a million times more, but also everything Rene does. And an Oxy One can do 48 Rene style sequencers at one time.

  • @pagodaa100
    @pagodaa1004 жыл бұрын

    Nice bit of instruction! Can you explain the modules providing clock from the tr8s?

  • @beerrunner1753

    @beerrunner1753

    4 жыл бұрын

    He is using the Hexinverter Mutant Brain to receive clock.

  • @ferrycollider

    @ferrycollider

    4 жыл бұрын

    As Beer Runner mentioned, it's a Hexinverter Mutant Brain. What makes it powerful is that you can create a configuration on a computer, then upload it to the module, allowing each channel to a customized output. I feel like it's it's really quite powerful for the price. In this video, I have it setup as follows: Channel 7 - MIDI sequence start trigger Channel 8 - MIDI sequence stop trigger Channel 9 - Click tick on run (1/4 note) Channel 10 - Click tick on run (1/8 note) Channel 11 - Click tick on run (1/16 note) Channel 12 - Click tick on run (1/32 note) You can see the possibilities for configuring it here: mutantbrainsurgery.hexinverter.net/

  • @pagodaa100

    @pagodaa100

    4 жыл бұрын

    ​@@ferrycollider Thanks! New to this and have been trying to understand Exactly this type of setup as a first step in modular. I have and will try: RYTM mk2 > Poly2 > Plaits... Seriously looking as selling the RYTM for the TR8s. I'm not obsessed with drum sounds and will prolly never use 1/2 of what RYTM can do. Thanks again for a nice clear explanation / video!

  • @ferrycollider

    @ferrycollider

    4 жыл бұрын

    ​@@pagodaa100 I had debated on getting a Rytm before I got the TR-8s. It definitely allows more sound design, but like you pointed out, most of the time I'm just going to reach for a classic kit (808, 909, etc.) or use a sample pack. What I like most about the TR-8s is how immediate it is. Setting up a drum kit requires some menu diving, but once you have the sounds in place, programming and live control are all real time which is nice. I love the 8 variations, and it also has a dedicated eurorack trigger out too, which I've played with a bit as well.

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