Dec 28, 2016 50+ videos Play all Mix - Kreator - Satan Is Real Guitar Solo Cover (w/tabs) YouTube Kreator - Satan Is Real - Guitar Cover (w/ leads) - AX8 - Duration: 4:34. ShidongWang 15,150 views. Jul 05, 2015 50+ videos Play all Mix - Real World Guitar Lesson with Tabs YouTube This Should Be Everyone’s First Guitar Lesson - Duration: 28:53. The-Art-of-Guitar Recommended for you. Nov 09, 2016 A common question after learning chords, chord progressions and songs on the Uberchord app (click for free mobile download) is how to proceed to learning guitar solos as a beginner guitar player. Well, if you are looking to learn a few guitar solos, here are 10 easy ones for beginners that will slowly ramp up in difficulty, but rank up in excitement. Jan 16, 2018 Hi everyone, in this quick tutorial I will show you how you can make a realistic guitar very easy! ? DSK Dynamic Guitars (VST) http://www.dskmusic.com/ds. We’ve recorded a number of video samples showing some unique features added to RealGuitar that let you emulate guitar performance in even more realistic way while creating solo.
If you are serious about creating truly realistic sounding solo and accompaniment guitar stuff for your songs, our product called RealGuitar is just what you need. RealGuitar is a sample-based virtual instrument with an innovative approach to guitar sound modeling and guitar part performing on keyboard.
RealGuitar 5 is a combo of two instruments: Classic – all of our original guitar models with loads of new features, and Steel String – the debut of new guitar sample set with five patches and three tunings for each.
Ways of using
There are three ways of using RealGuitar virtual instrument.
- Intuitive keyboard layout allows Live/MIDI Keyboard performance with numerous articulations, noises, guitar-specific tricks, strumming and finger picking techniques.
- Any guitar performance produced on a MIDI keyboard can be recorded or directly programmed in a MIDI track of any DAW.
- Built-in Song sequencer designed to arrange up to the entire song by simply inserting chord symbols and selecting pre-recorded guitar rhythm patterns.
Sounds and noises
We've carefully and meticulously recorded high quality samples of each fret of all acoustic guitar strings. RealGuitar sample library includes not only sustain sounds, but also other guitar-specific sounds and noises with dynamics and nuances an experienced performer can get from his/her instrument.
Techniques and control
An authentic sounding guitar part cannot be recorded by using samples on their own, but requires a bunch of guitar-specific techniques, which are simulated in RealGuitar. Whether you are playing live or programing a DAW, these techniques are controllable by using special gestures, key switches, key velocity, modulation wheel, sustain pedal, key aftertouch, MIDI CC, DAW parameter automation, and any combinations of these.
Chord voicing
Guitar chord voicing is very unique depending on guitar construction and is absolutely necessary to reproduce in order to achieve authentically sounding chordal parts. Our patented technology provides accurate reproduction of guitar chord voicing automatically for 30 chord types in all existing inversions, extensions and alterations.
Rhythm Patterns
In order to record an authentic accompaniment track, most session guitarists carefully study characteristic rhythm parts for the required style. We created a huge rhythm library consisting of 1250 patterns. It can be easily used for quickly creating guitar accompaniment parts in the DAW or in our internal Song sequencer.
Realism
Sophisticated humanization algorithms vary samples, technique and control parameters, timing, chord strum aspects to reach best possible realism in guitar tracks. That helps you bring a digitally simulated guitar performance maximally close to an analog recording of a best-in-class session guitarist.
Summary
RealGuitar and all MusicLab Virtual Guitars are simply the best in the industry. They are convenient, featured packed and give the user endless musical options. Whether a Beginner, Professional or a Producer you will find our products the answer for all of your virtual guitar needs.
MusicLab. Making Virtual Instruments a Reality since 2004.
What's New in version 5.
Reverse tape effects are special effects created by recording sound onto magnetic tape and then physically reversing the tape so that when the tape is played back, the sounds recorded on it are heard in reverse. Backmasking is a type of reverse tape effect.
History[edit]
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Although the ability to reverse the playback of recorded sounds had been known since the early days of gramophone records and can be achieved by simply placing the needle on the record and spinning it counter-clockwise,[1] reverse effects were regarded largely as a curiosity and were little used until the 1950s. In the 1950s, the development of the experimental music genre known as musique concrète and a simultaneous spread of the use of tape recorders in recording studios led to tape music compositions, in which music was composed on tape using techniques including reverse tape effects.[2]
The reverse tape technique became especially popular during the psychedelic music era of the mid-to-late 1960s, when musicians and producers exploited a vast range of special audio effects.
Examples[edit]
An example of the use of reverse tape effects is the song 'Roundabout' (1972) by the British progressive rock group Yes. The song begins with a sound which gradually fades in, and then ends suddenly, changing abruptly into guitar music, performed by guitarist Steve Howe.
The 'fade-in' sound is a minor chord (played on a grand piano by keyboardist Rick Wakeman) which was sounded and allowed to fade to silence. The tape of this piano chord was then reversed by producer Eddie Offord and carefully edited into the track. With the fading piano sound is thus reversed, it slowly builds up in volume before ending suddenly, at which point Offord edited it seamlessly into the first notes of Howe's guitar introduction. This distinctive effect is heard several times during the introduction and its reprise.
One of the best known examples of music featuring reverse tape effects is the Doctor Who theme (1963), composed by Ron Grainer and realised electronically by Delia Derbyshire of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.
Another famous example of the use of reverse tape effects is The Beatles' 1967 single 'Strawberry Fields Forever,' written by John Lennon and produced by George Martin. During the verses, Lennon's voice is accompanied by a series of rapid 'swooshing' sounds; these are actually the sounds of Ringo Starr's drum and cymbal accompaniment. These patterns were carefully pre-recorded, the tape reversed and the reversed percussion effects meticulously edited into the master tape to synchronise with the music. Around the same time, Jimi Hendrix recorded a backward guitar solo for Castles Made of Sand (song) released 1967. Stephen Stills, a close friend of Jimi Hendrix, used the effect on Graham Nash's song 'Pre-Road Downs' from Crosby, Stills & Nash's debut album.
Several other Beatles songs of the period — including Revolver (1966) tracks 'I'm Only Sleeping' and 'Tomorrow Never Knows' — also feature recordings of electric guitars, sitars and 'birds' which have been reversed.[3]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
Real Guitar Vst
- ^Kittler, Friedrick. 'The Gramaphone'. Retrieved 2007-03-01.
- ^Peters, Michael. 'The Birth of Loop:A Short History of Looping Music'.
- ^20 Things You Didn’t Know About The Beatles’ ‘Revolver’, NME, 2016-08-03
Real Guitar Online
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