yes, thanks tried something along those lines. however the results are always a lot dirtier then this, the distortion mushes the sound up too much. maybe i need more filtering...
Yeah, I would try a combination of sync oscillators, filtering and hardclip / softclip. Check out in tiar library, He has awesome sounding objects.. going to do some work and afterwards maybe I join the "dubstep lead" challenge. we should do sound cloning competitions, it could be fun!
while i like that sound very much it lacks the vowel character a bit i think.
i read up on vowel generation with just one filter (not the usual bandpass way) and it seems fm of the cutoff at audio rate is the ticket... there is the ZDF filter by @SmashedTransistors (thanks!!) and it works! check out the patch, it is still a prototype but you can already dial in nice throaty sounds. play with the dials!
thanks, i am trying to figure out a hardware only setup for live but funny you should mention bitspeek... i have some LPC objects working on the axoloti and tried to use them for bass the other day. needs some more tweaking though.
hmm, i think you are right that fat basses are not the most obvious to do on axoloti, but it is definitely possible. i have some patches that shake every p.a. system...(i was surprised when i tried them on a big p.a. actually) my current hardware setup for live (synthwise):
waldorf pulse II waldorf blofeld axoloti bela
i also own but don't use live:
waldorf pulse I waldorf microwave I preenfm2 dave smith tetr4
of all of them of course the axoloti and bela are the most flexible. i used the bela for a really cool granular looper/freezer sound mangler which would be impossible to do on an axoloti. axoloti is great for synth design though and has lots of modulation options via gpio etc.
Great sounding simple patch. I like it ! I find the axoloti can produce big bass sounds using the sin oscillator (with ou without fm/pm). I often just add a sin as an extra osc for all my bass sounds, it can really get those basses going. I actually found out by playing in festivals / live venues with big sound systems that it produces much more bass sounds that I thought... but that's quite usual I think with whatever you play (especially as I work in at a quite low volume at home)
I've recently changed one of my live setups, by adding a Behringer model D and a Neutron instead of an axoloti patch with 2 mono bases... and I find that spectrum / sound wise it's not that much different. There is definitely a much more 'analog' feel (and not only because it's always out of tune), but in a mix, I couldn't say one is much better than the other.
I think i have a few ideas to update the sound, will look into when I am back home in the afternoon.
But to sum up the ideas I have shortly:
Add som dirt to the sound, like some kind of distortion, maybe several distortions in parallel. Also add some compression.
You could even try the multiband system that I made, its in the comlib.
Maybe add different distortion type and compression for each band, low/mid/high. The MB system is completely open, so you can add any kind of effect to each band....
If you want to look into a vsti that is super cool for making evil ass bass sounds, look at Serum. Maybe you can replicate some of the functions from Serum into Axoloti?
All the big guys in D&B/NeuroFunk/Dubstep uses Serum. Noisia, Spor Billian are examples. And with good reason Its super complex and high quality.
Yeah, I think one of the issue with Axoloti and creating bass sounds is that Axoloti sounds "too clean". I know this is not a bad thing in many situations, but for bass "too clean" is not always a wanted feature.
To me Axoloti shines for sampling, that is my favourite use of Axoloti.
That said I also like to make full track with Axolotis only and in that case the "cleanness" of Axoloti is not an issue, cause all sounds come from the same device and everything has a bit of the same defined sound. I use for example Acustica Audio plug ins to add analog feeling to Axolotis clean sound. Acustica Audio plug ins are..... expensive...... And not possible to find cracked version as they use online validation so onl one way to get them... Buy them..... But worth every single penny, in my opinion at least.
but i think most of the dirt can be added quite easily. try the integratorleaky, it can work wonders! or add a small amount of randomness to your pitch. also a little noise can beef it up.
cool! looking forward to that. my patch was only a starting point, so great if you can take it further.
My approach to fattening up the bass is the dr j sparrow pedal. It's a cheap sansamp clone that I originally got for di-ing bass guitar but I used it on almost anything these days. Great on kick drums and bass synths. Really seems to bring out the subs without muddying everything up. And you can be subtle/extreme with the dirt. Got two of them, and another coming for christmas!