Re: Bass sounds wrong
Posted: Mon May 08, 2017 1:20 am
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Yes i will do that, but make a MMP, not MMPZ :)If none of the above suggestions work, let musikbear check out your Lmms projects .mmpz file.
Yeah. Some Vst's do use up, a good bit of cpu and do cause Lmms, to crash or freeze up.cosmia wrote: ↑Sat May 13, 2017 10:58 pmThanks for the feedback. I don't think I quite understand the technical side of things, but do I basically need to avoid using the preloaded instruments and instead use external VSTs? And the ones on the wiki in particular? I just tried the MDA Piano with the MaxSynths Bass Module, the one I've been trying to use, and they didn't sound right together. But then I tried the EVM bass from the wiki with the MDA and they sound correct. I used to use Cubase a bit and didn't have this issue - seemed all VSTs I used fitted together in tune so that's why I'm unfamiliar with this. I want to use LMMS if possible though because it's otherwise a lot easier to use.
The other problem is that these VSTs are using up a crazy amount of my CPU, sometimes nearly 50%! Why is that? I have noticed that several I've tried cause LMMS to crash, but they're probably not ones from the wiki.
The LMMS Instruments like Triple Oscillator, Watsyn, ZynAddSubFx etc from the "Instrument Plugins" list are fine to use.
THANK YOU musicbear. I have been struggling with this exact issue for a month. The sad part is that on several instances, this possibility came to mind as I had read that many of the samples are for single note use only and become distorted when raised or lowered in note. I thought I was loosing my mind and that I was tone or pitch deaf. I was actually devastated until now. I recently suffered from six years of tinnitus due to a wax build up and an inner ear infection. I was blessed to no longer have the ringing after the antibiotics were finished. It was like my right ear was kept in shrink wrap and preserved for six years, it is now a super ear. So, while working on my last few tracks, I would wake up and play a track as routine but it would sound totally different then when I last heard it before I slept. It was frightening. I also found that listening to a proper song, then switching to a track I was working on had the same effect as when I would wake up and listen. I believe that human hearing learns to accept bad notes and bad pitch within minutes of being subjected to it and that sleep resets the auditory components of the brain. I wonder how many people gave up on music production due to this unfortunate effect. Imagine going to sleep thinking that a song sounds good, having heard it on a stereo and two devices, then waking up and it sounds like a horror movie track, so you check how it sound on all of the devices and it all sounds like horror. I actually started to think that the Mandela effect was real, that my past actions were being altered. Man, I was freaking.