There are two different patches in the vid. It's hard to explain or remember how I did them exactly without looking them up. But vaguely the pouring water was oscs running at sub audio with some kind of random modulation and random kybd playing. The boiling water consisted of noise and highly resonant filter modulation and random kybd playing. I have an mp3 of me turning knobs and changing these sounds to prove they are a synth since some didn't believe it. I'll email you that link.
In this particular video the pouring water is one patch and the boiling water is one patch. I play them on a polyphonic keyboard, so you're hearing a number of different notes at once. As for the time to come up with the sounds, it's hard to say. I can usually get close in a couple of minutes, but then spend much longer trying to perfect the realism.
you are the master for the analog sound editing!
fred1996 3 years ago
Tell me, can you give me an idea of how you did the patch?
snevelin 3 years ago
There are two different patches in the vid. It's hard to explain or remember how I did them exactly without looking them up. But vaguely the pouring water was oscs running at sub audio with some kind of random modulation and random kybd playing. The boiling water consisted of noise and highly resonant filter modulation and random kybd playing. I have an mp3 of me turning knobs and changing these sounds to prove they are a synth since some didn't believe it. I'll email you that link.
Elhardt 3 years ago
amazing stuff. Do you layer the sounds ? Or is it only one patch each sound. How much time does it take to recreat this type of sounds ?
thekilon 4 years ago
In this particular video the pouring water is one patch and the boiling water is one patch. I play them on a polyphonic keyboard, so you're hearing a number of different notes at once. As for the time to come up with the sounds, it's hard to say. I can usually get close in a couple of minutes, but then spend much longer trying to perfect the realism.
Elhardt 4 years ago