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 How to emulate hammer ons?
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Comatose
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Joined: 29 Apr 2004
PostPosted: Mon Nov 01 2004 13:13    
How to emulate hammer ons?
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Does anyone know how to go about emulating hammer ons using mt2 effects? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated. Very Happy

Thanks

Comatose
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aRGee
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Joined: 24 May 2003
Location: Holland
PostPosted: Tue Nov 02 2004 20:00    
Re: How to emulate hammer ons?
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Comatose wrote:
Does anyone know how to go about emulating hammer ons using mt2 effects? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated. Very Happy

Thanks

Comatose


Maybe a stupid question, but what´s a hammer on?
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Blaster
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Joined: 04 May 2003
Location: Netherlands/Germany
PostPosted: Tue Nov 02 2004 21:02    
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Ah, so I'm not the only one who doesn't know what it is Very Happy


united trackers
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QBical
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Joined: 04 May 2003
Location: Utrecht , The Netherlands
PostPosted: Tue Nov 02 2004 21:55    
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isn't that the sound the 'hammer' of a piano makes when it hits the string?

And isn't that emulatable with a noise sample with a short decay?

Grtz
Ray


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Inge
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Joined: 04 May 2003
Location: Nieuw Lekkerland @ Holland
PostPosted: Tue Nov 02 2004 23:01    
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http://guitaralliance.com/guitar_lessons/guide_to_guitar_tablature/hammer-ons.htm

There you go. Google = power.

Inge


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Martin
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Joined: 05 May 2003
Location: Norway
PostPosted: Wed Nov 03 2004 00:35    
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I have also tried to reproduce this effect. But havent found any good way to do so. The best example of tracking and hammeron I know of is the old "Sound of da lunatic" (lunatic.mod) But I think the hammerons where sampled and not made with tracker effects. Perhaps one of the Impulse tracker effects would work... Confused
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Yannick
MadTracker Author


Joined: 16 Apr 2003
Location: Belgium
PostPosted: Wed Nov 03 2004 10:59    
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In theory you'd have to alter the pitch very quickly and "reset" the volume envelope to give an attack again.
In MadTracker it can be done the following way:

Code:
C-4  1 -- -- -- ----
---    -- -- -- ----
D#4  1 -- -- -3 FFFF
---    -- -- -- ----


The effect #3 is the glissando effect. It'll slide the pitch to the new note. The FFFF parameter will make it slide very quickly (instantly actually).
By mentioning the instrument number again with the new note, MT will reset the envelope position like if a new note was entered. The sample position won't be reset though (thanks to the glissando effect).

Yannick
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Martin
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Joined: 05 May 2003
Location: Norway
PostPosted: Wed Nov 03 2004 11:25    
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Very nice tip! Will try it out.
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Elijah
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Joined: 20 Jan 2004
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada Eh?
PostPosted: Wed Nov 03 2004 14:13    
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actually something that worked for me very well....


Code:
 

        Track 1      |      Track 2
                     |
C-4 01 80 -- -- ---- | G-4 01 00 -- -- ----
---    -- -- -- ---- | ---    -- -- -- ----
---    00 -- -- ---- | ---    80 -- -- ----
---    -- -- -- ---- | ---    -- -- -- ----
                     |

sorry about the late response. i was like.. hammer-ons. what a stupid topic name Razz

but.. im here to rescue. if that doesnt work i will send you the mt2 that i made. i just gotta go to work.


- Elijah
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aRGee
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Joined: 24 May 2003
Location: Holland
PostPosted: Wed Nov 03 2004 20:29    
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Inge wrote:
http://guitaralliance.com/guitar_lessons/guide_to_guitar_tablature/hammer-ons.htm

There you go. Google = power.

Inge


Oke, that exlains it quite well.
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Comatose
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Joined: 29 Apr 2004
PostPosted: Thu Nov 04 2004 09:11    
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Martin I checked out the lunatic mod and found the hammer-ons were indeed sampled, both rhythmically and lead wise. Not much help there really. For what it was though, it sounded pretty damn good and was defintely well thought out.

I've been racking my brains on how to emulate hammer-ons even tried using set offset as I.H.P. had suggested to me, but didn't even think of maxing out the glissando to FFFF. d'oh!

Since then I'd been toying with set offset paremeters and getting some decent results but couldn't seem to quite nail what I was going for. Now with knowing to max out the glissando I damn near have it nailed. Also I've been using the two effects in conjunction with one another to alter the tonality of the notes in question, and needless to say my ears are rather pleased with the results. Thank you everyone for the help and suggestions. Very Happy

Comatose

P.S.
Yannick and I.H.P. you both rock Dancing
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