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New Aqeel Aadam app Coastline. Out now

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Comments

  • @wim said:

    @oldsynthguy said:
    So this one seems to have beefed up the fx side of things, and is focusing on that.

    Hummm ...
    That could be totally right, but that isn't how I see it really. It feels to me like an tool primarily to build ambience closely related to the original input sound.

    Tide is extending on one of the modes of Outgrowth. It's analyzing the input and re-synthesizing it using sine (and other) waves rather than outputting a modification of the original sound.

    Glade is taking parts of the sound and playing them back in a sort of granular way. It's closest to Ridgewalk, but also kind of like Weeping wall.

    Sure, there's Chorus and Reverb FX, plus ways to introduce distortion, but I don't see those so much as the emphasis ... but I'm realizing as I type this that they can just as well be. Either way works. 😉

    I think I need to expand my way of looking at this thing.

    Are the Tide and Glade modes significantly different enough from their Outgrowth Additive and Granular counterparts to get extra mileage from them?

  • @Robin2 said:

    @wim said:

    @oldsynthguy said:
    So this one seems to have beefed up the fx side of things, and is focusing on that.

    Hummm ...
    That could be totally right, but that isn't how I see it really. It feels to me like an tool primarily to build ambience closely related to the original input sound.

    Tide is extending on one of the modes of Outgrowth. It's analyzing the input and re-synthesizing it using sine (and other) waves rather than outputting a modification of the original sound.

    Glade is taking parts of the sound and playing them back in a sort of granular way. It's closest to Ridgewalk, but also kind of like Weeping wall.

    Sure, there's Chorus and Reverb FX, plus ways to introduce distortion, but I don't see those so much as the emphasis ... but I'm realizing as I type this that they can just as well be. Either way works. 😉

    I think I need to expand my way of looking at this thing.

    Are the Tide and Glade modes significantly different enough from their Outgrowth Additive and Granular counterparts to get extra mileage from them?

    Yes because Outgrowth's additive and granular modes are just changing the way samples are played back. Coastline is actually making little loops of incoming audio and resynthesizing them. If you're familiar with Outgrowth and you watch my video on Coastline, the difference between the two apps will be abundantly clear tbh

  • @Gavinski said:

    @Robin2 said:

    @wim said:

    @oldsynthguy said:
    So this one seems to have beefed up the fx side of things, and is focusing on that.

    Hummm ...
    That could be totally right, but that isn't how I see it really. It feels to me like an tool primarily to build ambience closely related to the original input sound.

    Tide is extending on one of the modes of Outgrowth. It's analyzing the input and re-synthesizing it using sine (and other) waves rather than outputting a modification of the original sound.

    Glade is taking parts of the sound and playing them back in a sort of granular way. It's closest to Ridgewalk, but also kind of like Weeping wall.

    Sure, there's Chorus and Reverb FX, plus ways to introduce distortion, but I don't see those so much as the emphasis ... but I'm realizing as I type this that they can just as well be. Either way works. 😉

    I think I need to expand my way of looking at this thing.

    Are the Tide and Glade modes significantly different enough from their Outgrowth Additive and Granular counterparts to get extra mileage from them?

    Yes because Outgrowth's additive and granular modes are just changing the way samples are played back. Coastline is actually making little loops of incoming audio and resynthesizing them. If you're familiar with Outgrowth and you watch my video on Coastline, the difference between the two apps will be abundantly clear tbh

    Cool, thanks @Gavinski, planning to watch your video today. Cheers.

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