Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
Moderators: MattKingUSA, khz
-
- Established Member
- Posts: 538
- Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 9:05 pm
- Has thanked: 35 times
- Been thanked: 94 times
- Contact:
Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
What would be your suggestion for sounds for a beginner? The scenario is to learn a sequencer by making music, so it would be best to get a good matching collections of sounds and instruments?
I'm thinking synthesizer sound for melody, chords and bass as well as drums.
I'm thinking synthesizer sound for melody, chords and bass as well as drums.
- lilith
- Established Member
- Posts: 1701
- Joined: Fri May 27, 2016 11:41 pm
- Location: bLACK fOREST
- Has thanked: 118 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
I'd just recommend some sf2s in fluidsynth probably. There are tons of free options. See https://bedroomproducersblog.com/catego ... -shootout/ for some short lists.
_ssj71
music: https://soundcloud.com/ssj71
My plugins are Infamous! http://ssj71.github.io/infamousPlugins
I just want to get back to making music!
music: https://soundcloud.com/ssj71
My plugins are Infamous! http://ssj71.github.io/infamousPlugins
I just want to get back to making music!
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
plugin wise I'd say
drums: AVLinux drum lv2s
piano: mda piano
synth: amsynth (lots of presets to cover the bases)
bass? I'm not sure other than using amsynth. I use a mix of samples synths and recording myself.
drums: AVLinux drum lv2s
piano: mda piano
synth: amsynth (lots of presets to cover the bases)
bass? I'm not sure other than using amsynth. I use a mix of samples synths and recording myself.
_ssj71
music: https://soundcloud.com/ssj71
My plugins are Infamous! http://ssj71.github.io/infamousPlugins
I just want to get back to making music!
music: https://soundcloud.com/ssj71
My plugins are Infamous! http://ssj71.github.io/infamousPlugins
I just want to get back to making music!
- lilith
- Established Member
- Posts: 1701
- Joined: Fri May 27, 2016 11:41 pm
- Location: bLACK fOREST
- Has thanked: 118 times
- Been thanked: 57 times
- Contact:
- Michael Willis
- Established Member
- Posts: 1459
- Joined: Mon Oct 03, 2016 3:27 pm
- Location: Rocky Mountains, North America
- Has thanked: 71 times
- Been thanked: 169 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
Certainly I think that we could use some clarification from nilshi before we can really be helpful.lilith wrote:I thought it was about hardware gear ...
-
- Established Member
- Posts: 538
- Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 9:05 pm
- Has thanked: 35 times
- Been thanked: 94 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
Software.
I appreciate the answers so far. But you can be more specific!
Imagine this scenario:
You have a workshop or a class, a few hours only. You provide them with ready to use Linux Audio computers and you can teach them about how to set a note in Ardour or how to load a plugin in Carla.
But you want to make music as fast as possible. Pointing to AMSynth, or Zynaddsubfx or a GM Soundfont is certainly the right thing to do in most cases, but *here* you are dealing with people that don't know how a Lead is even supposed to sound. They will happily try to pair a Jazz brush snare with a dubstep bass synth and then wonder why it sounds so bad. They have never heard of any standard instrument configuarations and ensembles. Be it classical ("what is a string quartet") Jazz (Trio: Double bass, piano, drums) or 80s EDM. (TR808 + DX7 etc.)
Basically I want to provide a session with pre-defined instrument so that the students can concentrate on learning the sequencer handling and of course the composition itself.
Can you help me (and all of us!!!) by sharing actual sets or even settings to have some instruments that sound well together?
Generalisation: I strongly believe that beginner friendly setups, that take as much choices out of the users hand as possible, are much needed in Linux Audio.
I appreciate the answers so far. But you can be more specific!
Imagine this scenario:
You have a workshop or a class, a few hours only. You provide them with ready to use Linux Audio computers and you can teach them about how to set a note in Ardour or how to load a plugin in Carla.
But you want to make music as fast as possible. Pointing to AMSynth, or Zynaddsubfx or a GM Soundfont is certainly the right thing to do in most cases, but *here* you are dealing with people that don't know how a Lead is even supposed to sound. They will happily try to pair a Jazz brush snare with a dubstep bass synth and then wonder why it sounds so bad. They have never heard of any standard instrument configuarations and ensembles. Be it classical ("what is a string quartet") Jazz (Trio: Double bass, piano, drums) or 80s EDM. (TR808 + DX7 etc.)
Basically I want to provide a session with pre-defined instrument so that the students can concentrate on learning the sequencer handling and of course the composition itself.
Can you help me (and all of us!!!) by sharing actual sets or even settings to have some instruments that sound well together?
Generalisation: I strongly believe that beginner friendly setups, that take as much choices out of the users hand as possible, are much needed in Linux Audio.
- Michael Willis
- Established Member
- Posts: 1459
- Joined: Mon Oct 03, 2016 3:27 pm
- Location: Rocky Mountains, North America
- Has thanked: 71 times
- Been thanked: 169 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
Thanks, it is more clear now what your target audience is. At this point I think we need to narrow down a specific style of music, and what kind of workflow you want to teach.nilshi wrote:Software. I appreciate the answers so far. But you can be more specific!
It sounds like you are talking about people who don't necessarily have any background in music theory, composition, or recording. Based on that, they probably aren't going to care a whole lot about sound quality, so when faced with a decision between "easy" and "sounds good", let's pick "easy".
If the audience has any experience at all with notation, probably the absolute easiest thing would be to launch MuseScore, load a template with a few instruments (or even just a double-staff piano score), and let them drop notes and hear MuseScore's playback with default soundfonts.
If you have some kind of midi keyboard available at each workstation, you might just provide Carla and show them how to load a soundfont, wire it up to the midi keyboard, and plunk around on the keys. Then go into adding more effects like reverb, or show them that they can launch rakarrack and play with the presets.
If you want to teach more of a DAW experience, there are of course a lot of options, and it would be easy to overwhelm your students. I would recommend something really simple. Even though I love Ardour, I'm not sure how suited it is for introducing an absolute beginner to audio production on Linux. one of QTractor or Muse or Rosegarden *might* be better.
Anyway, if you're wanting more specifics about sounds to use, you are going to have to be more specific about what exact workflow you want to present. In my opinion, this kind of pedagogy is hard; ideally you would have a routine with some very specific and realistic goals to accomplish by the end of your session, but be flexible enough to accomodate somebody who wants to explore something outside of the material that you have prepared.
As an aside, I recently showed my music room to my brother, who has very little experience with Linux. He plays ukulele and guitar, so I launched Rakarrack, used Carla to wire it up to my stereo mic input, gave him some studio headphones and a ukulele, and showed him how to pick presets. I think he spent at least a half hour just messing around with it. He liked it so much, he said he'll bring his acoustic guitar next time. Slow and steady wins the race, right?
- sysrqer
- Established Member
- Posts: 2524
- Joined: Thu Nov 14, 2013 11:47 pm
- Has thanked: 320 times
- Been thanked: 153 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
For what genre? You mention classical and dubstep so it's hard to say.
-
- Established Member
- Posts: 2058
- Joined: Tue Feb 16, 2016 6:56 am
- Location: Kangasala, Finland
- Has thanked: 373 times
- Been thanked: 209 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
LMMS might be suitable option, including everything itself. To get properly paired sounds, you should select what sounds to use. With your selected sounds, you could order students what to use, or remove unwanted presets & samples from installation.
Linux veteran & Novice musician
Latest track: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycVrgGtrBmM
-
- Established Member
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2016 12:05 am
- Has thanked: 10 times
- Been thanked: 22 times
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
A single set of all-encompassing soundfonts, such as the ones provided with many Linux systems, can provide all kinds of instruments, from drums to cello, flutes, bass, trombone, piano, etc... All in one single soundfont set. Then use qsynth (a front end to fluidsynth) to interface with your sequencer and to provide all needed instruments.nilshi wrote:What would be your suggestion for sounds for a beginner? The scenario is to learn a sequencer by making music, so it would be best to get a good matching collections of sounds and instruments?
I'm thinking synthesizer sound for melody, chords and bass as well as drums.
You mention synths but you will not show and teach synthesis, that seems to be too advanced for the audience you describe. So get that part of the way to provide focus. Zynaddsubfx has 1000 options and no user manual in sight. It can be easy to get lost or ask unneeded (and difficult) questions about Zyn synthesis.
If you really want to complement the soundfont kit with a synth you can perhaps use OB-Xd which is simple but has a very good synthesis engine.
You first mention a sequencer then later on you mention a recording DAW, Ardour.
There's Muse, which has an embedded soundfont player, again simplying the interface for beginners.
http://muse-sequencer.org/index.html
Linux provides everything for free for learning music. The idea with beginners is to keep it simple, and not splash them with undue layers/complexity. Eg. why use Carla if it's not needed ?
Cheers.
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
yeah, name a genre and then we can get somewhere.
Picking the sounds that go well together? Isn't that what song producers get paid to do?
I think the most genre agnostic set will be just a GM soundfont like what ships with most distros. There are some better ones out there but good luck finding the ones that don't have licensing issues. I don't think GM sounds are ever that great, but its, well general...
Picking the sounds that go well together? Isn't that what song producers get paid to do?
I think the most genre agnostic set will be just a GM soundfont like what ships with most distros. There are some better ones out there but good luck finding the ones that don't have licensing issues. I don't think GM sounds are ever that great, but its, well general...
_ssj71
music: https://soundcloud.com/ssj71
My plugins are Infamous! http://ssj71.github.io/infamousPlugins
I just want to get back to making music!
music: https://soundcloud.com/ssj71
My plugins are Infamous! http://ssj71.github.io/infamousPlugins
I just want to get back to making music!
-
- Established Member
- Posts: 2058
- Joined: Tue Feb 16, 2016 6:56 am
- Location: Kangasala, Finland
- Has thanked: 373 times
- Been thanked: 209 times
- Contact:
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
Anyway, if someone has some answer to it, it would be nice to knowssj71 wrote:Picking the sounds that go well together? Isn't that what song producers get paid to do?
Linux veteran & Novice musician
Latest track: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ycVrgGtrBmM
-
- Established Member
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2016 12:05 am
- Has thanked: 10 times
- Been thanked: 22 times
Re: Suggestion for a good set of sounds for beginners
The sets provided with Linux distros are not that bad. Won't make anything pro with them, but then that's pretty far away from the context description here.ssj71 wrote:yeah, name a genre and then we can get somewhere.
Picking the sounds that go well together? Isn't that what song producers get paid to do?
I think the most genre agnostic set will be just a GM soundfont like what ships with most distros. There are some better ones out there but good luck finding the ones that don't have licensing issues. I don't think GM sounds are ever that great, but its, well general...
It seems that the person who wants to set up these convenient ready-to-use systems might also not be well-formed in music. If it was the case, then it would be easy to select sounds out of a soundfont set, totally bypassing the use of synths, and load them in a session of some sequencer/DAW, then saving this session and copying it to several properly configured computers.
The notion of using the additional Carla layer is also a bit strange, if one wants the simplest setup there is.
Ah well.