Tape Saturation for Home Studio and Ambient and Experimental Musicians | DIYRE 15IPS

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Hey everyone, I'm here this week to talk about one of my favorite tools for recording, sound design and composing: tape saturation. I'll compare the sound of my high-fidelity Tascam 32 reel to reel to a cool hardware tape saturation simulator called the 15IPS by DIY Recording Equipment.
Please go check out all their great studio products at: www.diyrecordingequipment.com
This isn't a sponsored video, I'm just sharing this out of enthusiasm for their products!
As always if you value what I do, please support me by buying some music or following me:
sycamorewillow.bandcamp.com
00:00 Introduction
01:04 What is tape saturation?
02:07 What does tape saturation do to sound?
05:08 What's so good about tape saturation?
05:57 How do you get tape saturation?
07:43 The DIYRE 15IPS
11:18 Last Memories Promo
12:00 Listening and comparing tape to 15IPS
17:49 Wrap up

Пікірлер: 31

  • @justaguitarman7
    @justaguitarman72 жыл бұрын

    Great video, Jason. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, man.

  • @t1d3s
    @t1d3s2 жыл бұрын

    Great video Jason! Super informative and interesting 👌

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks mate. Your comments always make me extra happy.

  • @coldsludge
    @coldsludge2 жыл бұрын

    fantastic video, I record to cassette tape a bunch and I really appreciate the in depth explanation!

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm so flattered! Thanks!

  • @curtainsinmotion
    @curtainsinmotion6 ай бұрын

    Hey, I just found your channel. Your videos are really inspirational, well explained and nicely produced. Great work! Thanks a lot for making these.

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    5 ай бұрын

    Ahhh! Thanks for your nice words!

  • @FacemeltingsolosMusic
    @FacemeltingsolosMusic2 жыл бұрын

    I'm here from the super secret Facebook group, haha! Anyway, nice vid. It gave me a lot to think about.

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey, thanks!

  • @God-ib7xc
    @God-ib7xc2 жыл бұрын

    20:09 my perspective probably isn't enlightening but as a kid who grew up in the 2010s when analog recording had pretty much died, the appeal of this sound isnt rooted in any kind of nostalgia or accustomation, I just love how natural it sounds. I'm sure theres a better way to describe it if I knew more music-y words. Warm? Idk. Like you said, I think it just has a pleasing sound to the human ear (Obv I can't speak for all gen z people, some have a weird pseudo nostalgia thing going on with lofi sonics but thats almost an entirely different genre of music)

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    First of all thanks for watching and saying nice stuff! Second, I think it's cool you are attracted to these sounds. As someone likely 20-30 years older than you I have a love after l affair with these sounds.

  • @God-ib7xc

    @God-ib7xc

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SycamoreWillow Also wanted to say thanks for making these videos!!! I always love it when people go out of their way to share the stuff they've learned and all the cool shit they do, it makes niche info accessable to noobs like me. Can't wait to see what you put out next 👌👌

  • @paxsincera836
    @paxsincera8362 жыл бұрын

    Although the tape saturator comes close, the Tascam is still better. That part 13:51 where the high frequency string pad comes in and then a deep bass comes in, is what defined it for me. Also the constant sine like pad, played throughout piece. took another sonic dimension through real tape. It became more prominent. Then all ties in one sound with the "glue" that tape imparts. There wasn't much "glue" with the saturator, but did have some warmness to it. The bass was also less deep, and there it was not the same prominence of the constant sine pad. Of course the original dry version was the least interesting. Thanks for this test. I enjoyed it.

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey there, what a thoughtful comment, thank you for that. Of course, our assessments were basically the same :)

  • @jezstevens
    @jezstevens Жыл бұрын

    This is great - I came across one of those Nagra speed controls which is superb for making spacey tape delay effects but I think my machine has the speed socket as well - I’d never thought of using it to CV pitch a loop!

  • @jezstevens

    @jezstevens

    Жыл бұрын

    …just double checked and it’s just the 1/4” socket but it occurs to me I could mod my speed regulator box to include a CV in - that way I could potentially “tune” the tape speed ie pitch of the loop with the knobs and then play CV pitches in! Game changer!

  • @jezstevens

    @jezstevens

    Жыл бұрын

    I suppose my comments would make MUCH more sense if they were on the right video. Just by luck I was wittering on about Nagra and tape speed on a video about tape saturation - it probably nearly made sense. 😅

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol I admit I was wondering! But honestly just glad to hear your thoughts. I suspect you meant these comments on a Hainbach video, right? If so that's a flattering confusion.

  • @jezstevens

    @jezstevens

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SycamoreWillow yes your interesting clip followed his one about the discovery that you can turn your Nagra into a pitchable looper with the Speed input. I love the idea of those modular tape saturation things BTW - I’ve forward them to a mate of mine who runs a studio. He’s currently struggling to restore an 8 track reel to reel. He’d be better off buying one of those racks!

  • @monkeyplusplus
    @monkeyplusplus8 ай бұрын

    Great video. I've been tempted by these colour format things after building (and loving) DIYRE's OLA5 and EQP5 500 series units. Id love to see these tape saturation units compared to Sound Skulptor's TS 500 units as well. Curious if you've had the chance to give those a spin.

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    8 ай бұрын

    Hi there, thank you! I have not tried the Sound Skulptor TS500. I'm sure it is very useful so if it speaks to you I just suggest trying it and see what you think. That said for me I like the colors platform because in addition to the tape saturation color there's so many other colors that are interesting and you can chain them and per color they're pretty cheap.

  • @travisraab
    @travisraab2 жыл бұрын

    i need to get my eye glass prescription updated

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    LOL, are you referring to the fact that my intro is blurry? If so, I'm sorry! I worked so long on this video that I was too lazy to reshoot that intro :|

  • @travisraab

    @travisraab

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SycamoreWillow yeah but im just messing w you man. great vid!

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@travisraab No worries dude, I can take it :)

  • @GeorgeLocke
    @GeorgeLocke2 жыл бұрын

    I think it's easy to understand odd harmonics coming from saturation because the saturation is symmetric on both sides of the waveform. Even harmonics are asymmetric, so if the distortion is symmetrical, the added harmonics will be odd.

  • @GeorgeLocke

    @GeorgeLocke

    2 жыл бұрын

    Note also that you can add even harmonics by adding DC offset before going into your saturating processor. This is easy in modular, but not necessarily otherwise.

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    2 жыл бұрын

    Interesting, I'm actually not sure I totally follow the thinking here, but I will go do some reading and see if I can completely grok this. Would love to hear more explanation of this as well! For example, why does symmetry lead to odd order harmonics? I think I'm missing the relationship between odd numbers and symmetric distortion.

  • @GeorgeLocke

    @GeorgeLocke

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SycamoreWillow I shouldn't say it's easy. If you already know that odd harmonics are always symmetrical, then it's easy. With an odd harmonic, the part of the wave from 0 to 90 is the mirror image of 90 to 180. With even harmonics, these segments are the same, not mirrored but repeated. So, if you have a wave where the first quarter of its phase is the mirror of the second quarter (0°-90° vs 90°-180°), and the second half is the inversion of the first (0°-180° vs 180°-360°), that wave only has odd harmonics. For example, triangle and square waves. Sawtooth doesn't behave like that, so it must have even harmonics. So far so good. Now, if your distortion will tend to "square off" the positive and negative portions of the input equally, I'm pretty sure that means it's emphasizing odd harmonics. If it acts differently on the positive than the negative, it will add more even harmonics (for example, full wave rectification is like one octave up).

  • @lb2696
    @lb26967 ай бұрын

    Was this the 15IPS Mkii or MKI?

  • @SycamoreWillow

    @SycamoreWillow

    7 ай бұрын

    Great question! Mk II. I much prefer this version. I've had both.

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