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You could use a church organ or a orchestra sample:
It almost doesn’t matter what you use as a sound source, as long as it has some high end you add resonance to the filter and cutoff control to the pedal or modwheel and open it slowly at the beginning.
You’re going to be compressing it to hell and drenching the whole thing in absurd amounts of reverb, anyway, which will eat any detail.
Last edited by analogika on 04 Dec 2018, 02:08, edited 1 time in total.
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kbmatson wrote:FWIW - I can't play it and the message tells me that "The uploader has not made this video available in your country." ???
Must be a EU/US thing then... works here in Denmark too It frequently also happens the other way, FWIW.
Install a (free) proxy in your webbrowser and select a country there where your connection will "surface".
This will circumvent these restrictions as the provider "thinks" it's in their country.
rg,rg
The following statement is not true. The previous statement is true.
RichardG wrote:
Install a (free) proxy in your webbrowser and select a country there where your connection will "surface".
This will circumvent these restrictions as the provider "thinks" it's in their country.
Obviously, this is not something that anyone can be expected to do in order to listen to a sound that someone else wants help to have designed To the OP's defence, it is not easy to see that a video you link to is only available in certain territories -- back in the DVD days with region codes, that part was easier...
But yes, your suggestion works also for me when the need arises (although some services tend to blacklist certain IP's that originate from VPN- and related services, so not always reliably).
RichardG wrote:
Install a (free) proxy in your webbrowser and select a country there where your connection will "surface".
This will circumvent these restrictions as the provider "thinks" it's in their country.
Obviously, this is not something that anyone can be expected to do in order to listen to a sound that someone else wants help to have designed To the OP's defence, it is not easy to see that a video you link to is only available in certain territories -- back in the DVD days with region codes, that part was easier...
But yes, your suggestion works also for me when the need arises (although some services tend to blacklist certain IP's that originate from VPN- and related services, so not always reliably).
True, I'm not happy with these regions either and I'm not asking anyone to follow my advice, just that it *is* possible if you want.
There are also methods which use another *persons* system as a proxy so you can circumvent the blacklist circumvention...
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