Pro-tip: Turn on the Live Synthesis in the Options menu for instantaneous results! Noise-based synthesis for synthesising original sounds from nothing or resynthesising wildly transformed sounds in a way that results in a continuous and smooth spectrum.Lossless processing of sounds based on images, so that real sounds can be transformed by transforming their image.The new Photosounder 1.11 and beyond (July 2022) The full version is available for $100 (about €100, £86ĭepending on the exchange rates) for a full commercial license. A demo version is available, with the ability to save the resulting sound to file disabled, and a short silence inserted every 12 seconds. Photosounder is available for Windows (64-bit, Windows 7 and above), macOS (64-bit, 10.9 and above). Every day spent using Photosounder brings new discoveries, new kinds of sounds never heard before, new effects never approximated, new takes on classical effects or methods, all merely by combining the power of the simple set of tools built in the program. The immense possibilities offered by Photosounder are only starting to be discovered. Powerful built-in image editing tools, some yet unknown to general image editing programs, are specifically tailored to enable you to create and edit sounds with ease in ways and with results simply impossible with other programs. Thanks to its powerful and omnipotent synthesis algorithms, it is capable of creating any sound possible. Photosounder is the first audio editor/synthesizer to have an entirely image-based approach to sound creation and editing. It is the ultimate bridge between the graphical world and the audio world, bringing the full power of image editing to the service of creating and transforming sounds. Only Photosounder truly allows you to transform any sound as an image and to create any possible sound from an image. Although if you know of any good way to time-stretch your sample then you can use that to help with the resolution problem.Every sound you've ever heard can be represented as an image and all possible sounds can be made from an image. But it's still doable, just harder to see what's going on. There's a bit of a problem with low frequency sounds, they're more blurry, there are solutions to that and I will implement something satisfactory, but I'd be nicely surprised if I had anything like that implemented in Photosounder before next year. Also it's one of my favourite test sounds to work with.Ī bass line would be easy to separate from any drum sound, even with a low pass filter, except the kick drum, if your bass line is really low. I chose it because I wanted something that would seem relevant to people interested in sampling, I mean, the result I obtained is something that people would have actually paid to have. Oh no Funky Worm is anything but an easy choice. You'd think I'd know better but it's actually only the second time I've done such a thing (and the first time wasn't very well executed, and that was when Photosounder didn't even exist). I mean separating a bass line from drums would that be different/harder?How long it takes really depends on what you're working with and what you want, some things can probably be done in 15-20 minutes, but I think it will frequently take a few hours. How time consuming will this be in general?ĭid you pick funky worm cause there's already a lot of separation between the individual instruments? It's fairly easy to spot when you play the sound in Photosounder and see the bar representing where what you're listening to is in the image. Although it can get a bit confusing when it's being buried under other sounds. The lead sound is very easy to spot, it's a vertical stack of parallel and identical lines/curves. So yeah you can get a quick result but if you want to obtain something very clean it'll take a few hours, in the hardest cases, I didn't make things easy by choosing this example. It took me several hours to process the Funky Worm sound, that was precise surgery hehe, although the first sound you hear in the blog post (the one with only the drums and vocals) was obtained as it is after probably half an hour of clone tooling, keeping in mind that we're talking about a sample almost 30 seconds long, which is a lot. How long did it take you to do, was it easy to identify the lead sound?If you want me to email you when the Mac version comes out PM me your e-mail address I'll add you to the mailing list. Hope 2 see a mac version also, maybe i might have to install VMfusion heh just to have a play with photosounder. Yo thats crazy, am well impressed thumbsup
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