Samplers Flashcards

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1
Q

What is sampling?

A

When you take part of a song, single note or sound and reuse it in another context

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2
Q

When did the technique of using everyday noises in music begin?

A

With the Concrete movement of 20th century experimental music

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3
Q

What was the main ‘instrument’ of early musique concrete composers?

A

The tape recorder

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4
Q

What was a limitation of using tape recorders for sampling?

A

it was impossible to change the speed of playback without altering the pitch

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5
Q

What decade saw the first instruments in pop music that could play back samples?

A

the 1960s

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6
Q

What did early samplers having limited memory in which to store samples cause?

A

The bit depth and sample rate were lowered, making the samples sound lo-fi`

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7
Q

How did bitcrusher plug-ins in DAWs create a lo-fi effect?

A

by lowering the bit depth and sample rate

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8
Q

Why did drum machines embrace early sampling technology?

A

The samples required were short, at a single pitch, and thus did not take up much memory

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9
Q

What feature controls do modern samplers often have that are similar to synthesisers?

A

LFOs and envelopes

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10
Q

In sampling, what is keyboard tracking?

A

Spreading a single sample out across the keyboard. The sample is pitch-shifted in response to the key played

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11
Q

In sampling, what is multisampling?

A

Taking a sample every few notes and mapping across the keyboard so that samples are pitch-shifted across a smaller range of notes

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12
Q

In sampling, what is velocity layering?

A

Switching between a number of different samples depending on the MIDI velocity of the note

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13
Q

When done badly, what can sampling introduce?

A

Artefacts such as clicks when a loop point is chosen badly

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14
Q

What can you do to a sample to avoid creating a click?

A

Cut the sample at a zero crossing point, fade the sample out, or use crossfade looping

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15
Q

What is a crossfade used for?

A

Fading between two different simples, audio regions or loops

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16
Q

What are the two different types of crossfade?

A

Equal power crossfade and Linear crossfade

17
Q

In sampling, what does loop do?

A

Repeats the sample

18
Q

In sampling, what does transpose do?

A

Changes the starting pitch/key of a sample

19
Q

In sampling, what does normalise do?

A

Increases the volume to the maximum without distorting

20
Q

In sampling, what is stuttering?

A

Repeating small parts of the sample to create a stutter effect

21
Q

In sampling, what is gapping?

A

Adding spaces between small parts of the sample

22
Q

In sampling, what is reverse?

A

Playing the sample backwards

23
Q

In sampling, what is time stretch?

A

Slowing down or speeding up the sample

24
Q

In sampling, what is pitch shift?

A

Moving the entire sample up or down in pitch

25
Q

On most samplers, what changes as a side effect of pitch-shifting a sample?

A

The length of the sample

26
Q

In sampling, what is destructive editing?

A

Making changes to the audio file associated with the sample - processing is not normally reversible

27
Q

In sampling, what is non-destructive editing?

A

editing without making changes to the audio file - effects or processing are easily removed

28
Q

In what situation do musician’s still struggle with the reliability of software-based equipment?

A

When touring