How to set up a new project in GarageBand iPad or GarageBand iPhone and record virtual instruments (guitar, bass, drums), and vocals.⏰ Time Stamps:00:00 Intr. These are referred to as 'Garageband Pro Instruments'. Bear with me, I'm pulling out a full content listing (sampler instruments only, not sample files or loops) from the installer and will post it bit by bit - this way you can compare what you have with what the installer should have written.
Hello everyone (that I didn’t scare away with my last post).
Today I thought I’d do something a little different and turn you on to some organ sample sets, free as well as commercial. For the few of you that have no clue what I’m speaking of -A history lesson:
‘Samples’ are snippets of recorded sound used in musical composition. It technically started in the 1940’s with Pierre Schaeffer and ‘Musique Concrète’.
1948!
In the 1960’s Musique Concrète went pop with the birth of the Mellotron, a keyboard that played 8 second lengths of audio tape playing a signle note of an instrument (like a cello, or violin) per key. Certainly, you’ve heard it.
The strings? Mellotron.
Then came the 80’s and with it came digital sampling. The biggest name in the form was the Fairlight CMI.
Peter Gabriel explains the Fairlight! Yes, in English
Art of Noise with their ground breaking Fairlight track (and amusing vid) for “Close To The Edit”
As the decade wore on, the technology became MUCH cheaper and the data storage much smaller resulting in many different choices in the sampling realm. From the heavy duty:
The EMU Emulator II
To the down and dirty:
The Ensoniq Mirage (RACK VERSION)
Pete Rock wailing on the now legendary EMU SP1200 (among other things)
To the thing you wish you never bought your grandkid for Christmas:
What they sold you…
What you bought!
Replace “Hello My Name Is Herbert” with a fart, or “Billy Is Gay” and the tears, they did flow huh, Gramma? Yep.
Well, with the 90’s came the advent of computer recording and now, in the late Aughties, anyone with a half decent computer or smart phone (iPhone / iPad) has the ability to also run a top of the line sampler / sequencer through any number of DAW programs like Cubase, Nuendo, Reaper, Fruity Loops, Ableton, Pro-Tool, Garageband, the list is LONG.
go ahead, hit the link, see if I care!
So, why oh, why did I drag through this?
Because some of you love organs, but don’t have the space necessary or means to have one in your home. Well, if you have a computer, enough space on your hard drive, and money to afford a USB MIDI keyboard controller, I think sampling is the solution for you! Once you understand the basics of sampling (terms like MIDI and WAV) and spend a little time with a simple program like Garageband (which comes loaded in most iMacs as far as I know) or Cubase lite, the internet will provide you with more sampled organ sounds than you could believe, often cheap, sometimes free!
Here’s a few places to get some organ samples!:
http://sonimusicae.free.fr/orguedesalon-en.html awesome pipe organ
http://www.forgottenkeys.co.uk/3_fe70.php A Yamaha FE-70 – exactly the kind of organ we love @ Organ *Pron! I’ve bought from Forgotten Keys numerous times, great stuff and SUPER CHEAP! I didn’t know about this until TODAY!! Plenty of classic Drumbox sample sets there, too!
http://www.sampletekk.com/proddetail.php?prod=PMIDELIVER-007-FORMAT A nice Kontakt style baroque organ
http://www.vintagekeyboardsounds.com/ A bunch of hot combo organs here!
http://audiogeneticslab.com/instruments/free/magnus-chord-organ A free Magnus chord organ set. Actually really cool!
http://www.hollowsun.com/shop/Freepacks Hollow Sun, the masters of the weird sample set, offer up a free Novachord, one of the coolest organ type instruments EVER!
http://www.freesound.org/ Speaking of weird and Musique Concrète…
Here are some VSTi (Virtual Studio Technology instrument), basically simulated digital versions of real instruments – no samples. Some are servicable, some are amazing, as far as organs go, there are TONS and the majority of them are FREE. So, please, mosey on over to KVR Audio check ’em out!
Here in North America the NHL playoffs are now in full swing and perhaps you're inspired to play some rocking organ! With GarageBand for iPad we get some great keyboard sounds with nifty screen controls! Not only can we use these keys in our songs that we're recording, but as I explained in a recent tutorial, live use is also a possibility!
Setup and Equipment Needed
There are a few things we need.
- Controller Keyboard with power supply - There are many to choose from and I use an Axiom Pro 61. You will definitely need the power supply as the iPad does not provide power through it's dock port. If you want to use the Korg Nano series, you will need a USB hub with power supply.
- Camera Connection Kit - Our keyboard controller communicates with GB through this device.
Axiom Pro 61
Apple's Camera Connection Kit
Controls
Each instrument has it's own layout (organ with drawbars, synths with filter controls) but also there are some functions just above the keyboard and these will vary with the instrument selected. For example, 'Sustain' will be on piano but not organ, organ will have the 'Rotary' switch for the Leslie, all depending on the instrument.
Pipe Organ Garageband Ipad Mini
Although we're going to be using a keyboard controller, if you want to use the onscreen keyboard, you get different controls for how your screen keyboard responds. On the far left is an 'Octave' plus and minus. A middle button for 'Glissando', 'Scroll', 'Pitch' which vary again depending on the instrument selected and the right side has a 'Scale', 'Arpeggiator' and 'Keyboard Layout'.
'Glissando' lets you slide across the keys like a real keyboard would. Think of the piano player using the back of his hand and sliding up or down the keys.
'Scroll' allows you to play a note and while holding it, slide the keyboard up or down. Useful if you need to get into different octaves of the on screen keyboard quickly.
'Pitch' is a like a pitch bend wheel but lets you pitch up or down between notes simply by sliding your finger. Great for the vintage synths!
Pipe Organ Garageband Ipad Cover
'Scale' is great for solos if you want to try different sounding scales in a piece of music. Once you pick the scale you want to use, the keyboard becomes more like a single row marimba minus the #/b keys. If you use a kb controller, you will still have all the notes available but you can learn what notes are used by playing them on the iPad and matching them on your keyboard. You'll soon be playing 'Klezmer' with ease!
'Arpeggiator' is your freedom to play multiple notes with one chord held down. You can choose note order, rate, and octave range. Great for dance tunes or your version of 'Teenage Wasteland'! Unfortunately, the arpeggiator does not work with a KB Controller.