Don't Enjoy the Silence
Sep 24, 2024
Arpeggios Everywhere
In this track I learned how to use MIDI arpeggios and I love them. Using arpeggios let me focus on the overall melody then later tweak how it "grooved". In general, when applied to a synth, they immediately conjure up 80s electronic music for me though they are much more broadly used. However, that feeling I got stuck around and I tried to make a purely electronica-style song though not necessarily 80s in nature.
Applying a MIDI arpeggio in Logic Pro is relatively straightforward but what took me a while to understand was how to have it traverse several notes and not just repeat the one being played. Eventually I realized it would iterate through the notes being played simultaneously so long as the arpeggio pattern was not forcing the root note to be played (indicated by the triple-note – or whatever that is called – beneath the sequence number).
Armed with this, I decided to use a MIDI chord trigger that would play the sus 4, 7, and 9 of the note being played, and put that through the arpeggio. Now I could play just one note and have it spawn several interesting patterns depending on the arpeggio settings. I played with this for a very long time.
Cleaning Vocal Samples Again
I've covered this in other song write-ups but, again, I took some nasty audio clips to use as vocal samples and cleaned them up as best I could. I tried a trial version of some software called UNFILTER which is purportedly made to do things like this. However, the results I got were not as good as I'd have hoped for commercial software. Instead, I ended up using Logic's stem splitter which did a remarkably good job extracting the (spoken) voice from all the noise and barely coherent background music.
Samples Used
Recorded myself:
- Me clapping
Vocals:
- A 1997 BBC interview with Thomas Bangalter (lost the source link)
From landr.com:
- CHT Aurora Crash