what program angerfist uses?

From what I gathered angerfist is as mainstream as it gets in hardcore.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0E5u0HoHlY


I would agree with this mate, imo most hardcore is mainstream.
Now dont get me wrong I listento/produce/mix hardcore all the time, but i prefere Underground Hardcore E.G. Evil of Pain, In-toxx etc.

Mainstream hardcore just reminds me of how hardstyle has turned out these days (now called Nu-style) compared to what it was like as early hardstyle E.G. old skool Dana, Dutch master, Luna, Zany. Now imo its all shite !!!!!

listen to underground music !!!!!!
lol ^_^
 
what is a good program to produce/edit tekno...i wanna manipulate audio tracks...example: gangsta by neophyte...im trying to find a good program...

Tbh mate i personally dont know which program Angerfist himself uses, but i use ableton myself and i love it!!!

at the start it can be abit much to get your head around, but once you find out how to use the program (even a wee bit) and you catch yourself moving to your own music, it get very, very addictive and you keep coming back for more. Plus on the good side there is hundreds of tutorial videos for all levels of users of the program.

Sonic acadamy make some of the best tutorials for ableton that ive seen on the internet.

but i wish you all the luck with what ever program you decide to use.

Happy Producing!!!
^_^
 
here what angerfist uses

Funny, this thread has always stuck in my head for some reason, lord knows why.

Anyway....

From the man himself:
I still use Cubase today, with mostly VST plugins. My favorite plugins are Z3ta+, Sylenth1, Drumazon, Microtronic and the UAD DSP-Card. The only real hardware I use is a Virus TI snow for those nasty screech sounds.

A UAD DSP Card is just a soundcard really, with some inputs (for his Virus I guess)... I wouldn't go out and buy a Virus TI snow if I were you, unless you have a spare €1200 :P

Pretty basic setup.

ripped out of an interview with him here:
http://theharderview.com/interview-angerfist-the-netherlands/

you can see in this video at 3:32 that he is using an AKAI APC40 and Ableton LIVE to play live... but perhaps he just uses that to play live, a lot of producers do, actually 'play' live is a bit of an over statement for Ableton... launch loops live is closer, in the mode he has it in in that video anyway... heh.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpXF6TtcAeE

Think thats his setup busted wide open, hth :D...

Perhaps now this thread will stop hanging around in my mind.

Oh, almost forgot, have a look at the new Masters of Hardcore Producers Tips Website, only 2 tutorials on there so far, one from Outblast on making a overdriven kick in Cubase and one from Accelerator on making the screech Angerfist is talking about using a softsynth.

http://www.mastersofhardcoreproducer.com
 
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FL Studio is good to start with, however it can be hard to move on to something more advanced if you choose to later on though.

It's probably the easiest program to use to begin with though, and it's equally as capable as any other program, everything depends on how well you can use it.

I don't know why people keep saying Fruity is the easiest. Surely the easiest is the one that is first learned throughly?

I started off on Cubase, which seemed fairly logical in it's layout. From that I learned Logic which operates in a very similar way to Cubase but oddly seems less logical. But I find Cubase easy.

I later found that Reason, although a little more compact and cluttered (IMO) worked in a very similar way to the above two and although a little more complicated, Ableton seems relatively easy to get to grips with.

But Fruity totally baffled me. I couldn't figure out how it works short of a 4 bar loop and some FL synths. I don't know why I stopped using Cubase to learn that.

I have no issues with FL as a DAW, it's perfectly capable of doing pretty much everything the others are (so I've been assured), but it seems people who use Fruity rarely stick with it (I don't know why) and move onto one of the above. So if this is the ultimate intention; wouldn't it be better to learn one of the others that you would eventually move onto, instead of learning FL and then back to square 3 to relearn what you could already know?

Or learn FL and stick with it.

Essentially, all DAWs do the same thing just in different ways. It's all about learning how to do what you need to do. Very few people will get onto a DAW and be able to make slamin' tunes straight off.
 
you can see in this video at 3:32 that he is using an AKAI APC40 and Ableton LIVE to play live... but perhaps he just uses that to play live, a lot of producers do, actually 'play' live is a bit of an over statement for Ableton... launch loops live is closer, in the mode he has it in in that video anyway... heh.

Only an overstatement if the performer is lazy. There are plenty of ways to turn Ableton into a live tool, can be just as live as playing synths in a band or guitar to a backing track :)
 
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