Just sharing some things I recently learned. This opens some major doors on manipulating samples in LMMS.
Step 1: Open Vital and disable OSC1, then enable noise oscillator.
Step 2: Drag sample from outside LMMS (doesn't work internally) into the noise oscillator. If you're a Windows user a quick way for doing this is by pressing Win key, typing the name of your sample folder, hitting enter. Then press Alt+Tab once (this brings the window you opened to the front) and dragging and dropping the wav file into the noise oscillator. This may sound like a lot of steps but seriously, once you learn it you will save you a lot of time.
Step 3: Click the midi keyboard icon in the noise oscillator (this makes it polyphonic instead of monophonic).
And voila! You now have an insanely powerful sampler that even supports glide/portamento.
The icing on the cake for me is this trick Musicbear taught me; accessing the control knobs by clicking the wrench icon.
Just think... you can now modulate anything from effects, LFOs, envelopes and so on.
I hope this tutorial was helpful and I hope you all create some cool sounds.
Step 1: Open Vital and disable OSC1, then enable noise oscillator.
Step 2: Drag sample from outside LMMS (doesn't work internally) into the noise oscillator. If you're a Windows user a quick way for doing this is by pressing Win key, typing the name of your sample folder, hitting enter. Then press Alt+Tab once (this brings the window you opened to the front) and dragging and dropping the wav file into the noise oscillator. This may sound like a lot of steps but seriously, once you learn it you will save you a lot of time.
Step 3: Click the midi keyboard icon in the noise oscillator (this makes it polyphonic instead of monophonic).
And voila! You now have an insanely powerful sampler that even supports glide/portamento.
The icing on the cake for me is this trick Musicbear taught me; accessing the control knobs by clicking the wrench icon.
Just think... you can now modulate anything from effects, LFOs, envelopes and so on.
I hope this tutorial was helpful and I hope you all create some cool sounds.