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Samples from TB Proteus 1/XR by Sam Eassa /music/samples/proteus3.zip
| 10 Sep 1996 (catalog date)
746,435 bytes
| Download FTP scene.org
| | This is the third of a series of samples extracted from the Turtle Beach Multisound Proteus 1/XR synthesizer. Whereas the first and second collections (proteus1.zip and proteus2.zip) were a collection of melodic as well as percussion samples at 22kHz/16 bits, this one is percussion only at 44.1kHz/16 bits. Based on some good feedback (thanks Jester :-) I kept all samples very basic (no combos or riffs) for maximum usefulness. The quality is also better due to the fact that the sampling was done locally on the multisound as opposed to using a seperate PC. This has yielded some very quiet and crisp samples compared to the first sets of samples. Although the samples are in .wav format, they can be ported to .smp or almost any other using a program such as Goldwave. All samples are 44.1kHz, 16 bit and were created by playing different percussion notes on the multisound, and capturing them live to RAM and then to disk. Post editing was done to optimize gain and remove the dead space.
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Samples from TB Proteus 1/XR by Sam Eassa /music/samples/proteus4.zip
| 11 Sep 1996 (catalog date)
1,495,900 bytes
| Download FTP scene.org
| | This is the fourth and probably last in a series of samples extracted from the Turtle Beach Multisound Proteus 1/XR synthesizer. In this collection, I've tried to sample unique sounds native only to the proteus synthesizer and that cannot be found in the General MIDI set. I'm hoping to provide the means for the many composers out there to make some truly unique sounding mods. I kept all samples very basic (no combos or riffs) for maximum usefulness. The quality is also better due to the fact that the sampling was done locally on the multisound as opposed to using a seperate PC as was done on the first two Proteus packs. This has yielded some very quiet and crisp samples. Although the samples are in .wav format, they can be ported to .smp or almost any other using a program such as Goldwave. All samples are 44.1kHz, 16 bit mono and were created by playing different notes on the multisound, and capturing them live to disk using the Multisound's own digital audio sampler. Post editing was done to optimize gain and remove the dead space as well as to keep the samples reasonable small.
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