I love synths, and this is an incredibly impressive collection! My studio for the most part used synth modules, chiefly due to space constraints - and everything was set up for automation & recording from within the DAW. Unfortunately I had to take it down due to moving house to someplace where there just wasn't really the room. But I'm sure I'll put another studio together in the future, and it will be much better than my first one.
I just bought my first synth, not very originally a Minilogue XD. A much cheaper mid-life toy then a sports car or pilot's licence! I'm interested in any recommendations for learning resources. Synthorial is often mentioned, and various videos on YouTube, plus just messing around or focusing on general music theory. But I'd love a comprehensive website or blog post series that I could gradually work through.
I think the best way to learn how to use a synth, is to play in a band with other people. They will ask you to play things you never thought of before.
When the drummer starts by "I want to feel like I'm under a bridge when it's raining rocks and frogs".
Minilogue xd is perfect for this kind of exercise.
Nope - Mozilla HTML editor, more recently SeaMonkey
Glad you like the website and the contents. No it isn't sophisticated HTML but simple enough to do the job and I have not seen one format error since I started it almost 20 years ago. If it ain't broke...
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[ 5.4 ms ] story [ 28.7 ms ] threadHowever, some HTML features are questionable. For example, HR has inline styles but could looks the same with just height and color HTML attributes.
Perhaps, MS FrontPage?Nope - Mozilla HTML editor, more recently SeaMonkey
Glad you like the website and the contents. No it isn't sophisticated HTML but simple enough to do the job and I have not seen one format error since I started it almost 20 years ago. If it ain't broke...