Jordan Rudess Snarling Pig Tutorial
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Jordan Rudess Snarling Pig Tutorial
I haven't yet seen all of this but so far it looks great.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1qElNR5 ... re=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1qElNR5 ... re=related
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
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Thanks man...just to bring it up again so someone can use it again.
http://www.basaristudios.com
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I went through the tutorial too and it is very well laid out. As Nightale said, he explains what everything does, rather than just going through the motions. I learned quite a bit from this and have a fantastic combi for a sound that I really wanted, but didn't know how to create. The guys in my band love it and we'll be using it in a future song, for sure.
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I have to agree. It's great to hear "why" things are done the way they are. So far I only have the progs. done but I'm thinking of using some LFO modulation at different speeds in them later on. The Snarling Pig sound is freaking awesome but I want to make it more my own. I'm also thinking about having a variation of the sound with feedback for a screaming lead sound.
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Would be cool anyway if s#one or some you could post their result(s) on korgpatches, as a starting point for others.
Any chance?
Any chance?
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it's difficult for me but I'm sure someone can put it up here. My computer is in another room.
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
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Well, I've just finished making the Snarling Pig on my Kronos and I have to say it sounds fantastic.
I'm thinking about tweaking it now though. I always do that. I played with some delay effects but I found that all they did was mush up the sound so unless you are using echo for a special part I don't see it working. That's just my opinion though.
I am thinking about running each individual prog through s pitch shifter though. Or maybe having a few slightly detuned progs; perhaps 3 of each running through the effects that are already there. Just to fatten it up a bit more.
Also, maybe some distortion might be nice. Not too much though as it might thin the sound out too much.
I'm thinking about tweaking it now though. I always do that. I played with some delay effects but I found that all they did was mush up the sound so unless you are using echo for a special part I don't see it working. That's just my opinion though.
I am thinking about running each individual prog through s pitch shifter though. Or maybe having a few slightly detuned progs; perhaps 3 of each running through the effects that are already there. Just to fatten it up a bit more.
Also, maybe some distortion might be nice. Not too much though as it might thin the sound out too much.
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
I just uploaded my version of the Snarling Pig to Korg Patches.jimknopf wrote:Would be cool anyway if s#one or some you could post their result(s) on korgpatches, as a starting point for others.
Any chance?
http://korgpatches.com/patches/kronos/snarling_pig
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There is a webcast with Jordan Rudess where he answers questions of viewers. One of the questions was how he creates his leads. He gives some great tips about that subject and shows some examples.laandodeman wrote:I like the sound design of Jordan Rudess a lot..... but never understood the fascination with the snoring pig..... In all honesty, I think it's ugly. Just don't like it. Would like to know if there are some website explaining his more melodic leads!
The information he gave was enough for me to modify my existing jordan rudess leads (for personal use) and made them sound more authentic.
You can watch the stream here, it's a fantastic webcast in my opinion.
http://www.livestream.com/korgusa/video ... d66f4a7cab
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I love it because it's dirty and aggressive. It's great for reinforcing a heavy guitar part. It also plays nice with brighter sounds, to add some contrast. Check out how Jordan uses it at 7:27 of this video:laandodeman wrote:I like the sound design of Jordan Rudess a lot..... but never understood the fascination with the snoring pig..... In all honesty, I think it's ugly. Just don't like it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23OR-m4PI_Q
I understand why some people wouldn't like the sound. It definitely has a harsh quality to it that wouldn't be appealing to all listeners. For those of us that do like it, the trick is finding the right spot to use it, so it fits the music.