This has just blown my mind. I followed along on my own Digitone, and couldnt help but exclaim 'no way' multiple times. And your English is fantastic btw. Thank you!
This tutorial just immediately elevated my track I am working on today. Thank you sharing this, never thought to use the drum synth machine in this fashion. Subscribed!
Wow, this is really interesting. I was excited enough after buying a discounted DN II, but this blew my mind. Thanks for the info, I can’t wait to try all of this
Amazing job 👍🏼 I receive my DTone 2 tomorrow luckily I also have Digitakt 2 im looking forward to pairing the 2 together hopefully opening up a world of ambiance … fingers crossed my idea works Thanks for the tutorial 😊
Thanks! Really intersting uses for the Digitone. Are you planning on doing a tutorial for the Guitar and Cello sounds? How about something more metallic, like a hammered dulcimer?
Thanks a lot! My wife was not too happy that I spent all Sunday at home preparing this video, but I'm definitely planning more tutorials on synth patches, he he :)
Clear and informative ! The cheat sheets are useful as well. Thank you ! The cello sounds pretty good, do you know if the Digitone 2 could approximate winds as well ? (flute / clarinet / oboe)
Thank you very much. I've only had my DN2 for a short time, so I haven't tried wind instruments yet. But I suppose clarinet, oboe and bassoon should be easy with subtractive synthesis (Wavetone machine). Flute is a chapter in itself and worth experimenting with - FM synthesis could be interesting here (FM tone machine), but also "noise to comb filter" technique (wavetone or FM drum machine).
Many thanks 🙏. Yes, it's possible to get quite close in terms of sound. It really depends on how close you need to get. An acoustic guitar mixed into a pop track should be fairly easy. However, it gets much trickier with a solo guitar in classical music, folk, etc. - there, you'd need to accurately simulate not just the timbre, but also the playing technique including all the nuances, imperfections, and accompanying sounds like finger movements on the fretboard. Arranging with a skilled guitarist to sample their riffs will always be easier :)
@@dub1x Thanks so much for taking the time to read the question and answer it. The timbre is really what i am essentially after. I'm sold : Digitone 2 is now officially in santa's backpack on its way to me. Thanks again.
This has just blown my mind. I followed along on my own Digitone, and couldnt help but exclaim 'no way' multiple times. And your English is fantastic btw. Thank you!
Thanks a million! You're too kind.
Woooow amazing patch this synth seems so versatile !
Thanks a lot, I'm glad you liked the patch. Absolutely, DN2 is a powerhouse!
Can’t even imagine, how are you doing this. But it’s amazing! Thank you!
Thank you 🙏
I made a guitar and cello patch for my newest Digitone 2 sound pack. Wow I love this synth! It’s really next level.
True, DN2 is the most complete instrument of the "holy trinity" 👍
Wow ! So interested on how you make these amazing guitars and cello sound ! They sound so nice !!
Thanks :)
Thank you very much. Looks like I'll have to prepare more tutorials :)
@ it would be so nice, thanks mate :)
This is so awesome. I would love a tutorial for making a wood tone flute or something like that. Ill keep trying
Thanks a lot. That’s an interesting idea. There are so many beautiful sounds to synthesize and so little time :) But I’ll keep it in mind.
This tutorial just immediately elevated my track I am working on today. Thank you sharing this, never thought to use the drum synth machine in this fashion. Subscribed!
Great! I'm happy the video was helpful. Thanks a lot!
Wow, this is really interesting. I was excited enough after buying a discounted DN II, but this blew my mind. Thanks for the info, I can’t wait to try all of this
Thank you too and have fun!
Fantastic, this is the best piano patch I've heard on it yet!
Thanks a lot!
Amazing job 👍🏼
I receive my DTone 2 tomorrow luckily I also have Digitakt 2 im looking forward to pairing the 2 together hopefully opening up a world of ambiance … fingers crossed my idea works
Thanks for the tutorial 😊
Thank you very much. Both are amazing machines - I hope they will be an endless source of inspiration for you to create beautiful ambient music.🤞
Thanks! Really intersting uses for the Digitone. Are you planning on doing a tutorial for the Guitar and Cello sounds? How about something more metallic, like a hammered dulcimer?
Thanks a lot! My wife was not too happy that I spent all Sunday at home preparing this video, but I'm definitely planning more tutorials on synth patches, he he :)
GREAT job on these patches and sounds.
Thank you 🙏
Great video, thank you!!
Thank you 🙏
Great video Aleši 👏 thank you for this tutorial, good job
Thanks a lot Ondřeji, I appreciate it.
Thank you for sharing.
with pleasure
Great job! I'll see if I can use this and make a more lo fi version of the piano patch.
Thank you!
Well done! These sound amazing
Thank you!
Clear and informative ! The cheat sheets are useful as well. Thank you !
The cello sounds pretty good, do you know if the Digitone 2 could approximate winds as well ? (flute / clarinet / oboe)
Thank you very much. I've only had my DN2 for a short time, so I haven't tried wind instruments yet. But I suppose clarinet, oboe and bassoon should be easy with subtractive synthesis (Wavetone machine). Flute is a chapter in itself and worth experimenting with - FM synthesis could be interesting here (FM tone machine), but also "noise to comb filter" technique (wavetone or FM drum machine).
Great stuff! Would love to see a Rhodes/wurlitzer tutorial in this same format!
Thank you! There are a lot of good suggestions here for the next tutorial, so we'll see :)
Excellent , I would not have gone this route Ty
Thank you!
Great tutorial. Also I totally missed than you now can have a key tracking as a mod source until now
Thank you very much. The key tracking modulation is super useful - I wish Elektron would put it on other digi boxes too...
would love to see a video on the cello :)
Will do :)
Thank you for that….
No worries!
wow, impressive. Do you think it would be possible to use a similar approach for a convincing acoustic guitar timbre?
Many thanks 🙏. Yes, it's possible to get quite close in terms of sound. It really depends on how close you need to get. An acoustic guitar mixed into a pop track should be fairly easy. However, it gets much trickier with a solo guitar in classical music, folk, etc. - there, you'd need to accurately simulate not just the timbre, but also the playing technique including all the nuances, imperfections, and accompanying sounds like finger movements on the fretboard. Arranging with a skilled guitarist to sample their riffs will always be easier :)
@@dub1x Thanks so much for taking the time to read the question and answer it. The timbre is really what i am essentially after. I'm sold : Digitone 2 is now officially in santa's backpack on its way to me. Thanks again.
I have a request off help for a patch where can I get in touch with you ? Instagram or email ?
answered by email