Markus 88 Released.
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Congrats! I can't wait to release some stuff soon too!
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Looks very nice. Did you make the model of the instrument or is it a photo? What's the licensing (aka can I get the source code)?
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@dustbro I'll be waiting :) thanks!!
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@d-healey it's a commercial release, not open source but you can see yhe beginning of it here https://forum.hise.audio/topic/970/co-create-a-wurlitzer
Ep was modeled and then photoshopped :) -
@hisefilo said in Markus 88 Released.:
@d-healey it's a commercial release, not open source
You can have a commercial release that is also open source you know ;)
That's a really good model, what 3D program do you use?
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@d-healey yes :) will investigate that model.
App is Modo 3d. From Luxology -
@hisefilo I'd not heard of Modo 3d. Will check it out.
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@d-healey also posted a few days ago. Use "hiserocks" at checkout to get a free copy :)
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@hisefilo I'm on Linux Mint
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@d-healey oh. I thought you also were on Win. I have plans to install Ubuntu soon
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@hisefilo said in Markus 88 Released.:
@d-healey oh. I thought you also were on Win. I have plans to install Ubuntu soon
I dropped Windows a while ago when I realised almost everything I use runs natively on GNU/Linux
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@d-healey I tried many many OS. Even Next :) I also made a Hackintosh a few years ago. But updating was a pain. I like Linux, but I m so Photoshop and Illustrator dependant. Inkscape and gimp are not even close
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Congrats man...sounds amazing. I think AcousticSamples did something like this just recently as well. The product is called Vtines. I'm a bit confused as to how all of this works though. So it's not a sample based product, rather all Math I'm guessing. So you convert a Rhodes from a series of sine waves, similar to a wavetable, but mathmatics is making the sound, instead of a sample....
Pretty ingenious idea....We've been working on something similar with wavetables.
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@hisefilo Congrats man! It looks and sounds very cool :)
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@midiculous thanks!!!! It's based on sine generators, not samples. But reproducing the harmonics series depending on velocity, note, etc.
You can google Julius Smith to find out more about the subject. This guy is a genius. -
@orange thanks man! Im so excited. Gearnews just posted us
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