The name propellerhead comes from the pejorative term used to deprecate science fiction fans and other technophiles, who are stereotypically drawn wearing propeller beanies. The company is not related to the British electronic music duo Propellerheads.
EDIT: Part of why it is so good is because it mimics hardware, so if you use hardware a lot it's really easy to get around and use, doesn't feel as much as just a computer program. Also it's just very easy to do all these things like a nice rumble bass and sweet kicks, and the effects it has is just on another level sometimes. So, who else is a reason fanboy?
Hello
i am trying a new setup with a digitakt and properllerhead reason. I want to use the digitakt and its sequencer to drive Reason machines. I also want to use each digitack output channel separately to apply effects to it. But when I look at the back of the plugin in reason there are only 7 outputs and the main one. In addition, the sound level of the outputs is lower than the main one and there is no more reverb and delay. Can you help me solve this problem?
thank you !!!
I want to use the digitakt and its sequencer to drive Reason machines. I also want to use each digitack output channel separately to apply effects to it. But when I look at the back of the plugin in reason there are only 7 outputs and the main one.
A cool track to listen too, for instance, would be the following song:
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This sound touches the realm of phasing effects, the movement of the effect constantly changes during the progression of the song itself. Which makes it almost like a psychological effect if you will (most likely the reason why the song title is called "Neurotransmitting Clouds On The Secret Freeway". Makes sense.
While the Combinator is the big story, it's not the only reason to love Propellerhead Reason 3. We flipped for the improved browser, which makes it easier to find just the patch or effect we want. You can now preview instruments and effects within the browser, making the selection much faster. You can also do a text search, to find, for example, everything related to the trumpet, no matter what sound bank folder it's in. Make your selection and Reason will automatically load the correct modules into your rack, whether a Combinator, a sampler, or a synth.
Finally, you could implement a dummy audio device which would route the audio to/from wherever you want or process it in some way.I imagine all of these would be reasonably difficult. MIDI is probably the easiest of the three (I have no idea how easy or hard the Rewire protocol is to use).
It used to bundle the Javadoc documentation as well, but for somereason their latest downloads don't include that. It's a pity, becausethat's where the Javascript bindings are documented. So, now you haveto browse the source or build the Javadoc yourself. (It has some built-in examples that are accessible from the scripting window, you should check them out first. My first example is from there.)
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