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Loading Serum Preset into Deluge

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Asdr1204Asdr1204 United StatesPosts: 4

Hey everyone new Deluge user here. Forgive me if this has been already asked. But I have some presets on serum I'd like to load into my deluge to use as a synth. Do I need to record the synth onto the deluge or do I need to create a midi clip first then load onto the SD card? Any guidance would be appreciated.

Best Answer

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    rezareza los angelesPosts: 728
    Answer ✓

    serum and the deluge are different synth engines, so you can't simply drag presets from serum to the deluge.

    you're options are carefully trying to recreate presets by copying what settings a preset has on serum and finding it's parameter's counterpart and values on the deluge or sampling various notes of the serum preset and loading as a multisample preset on the deluge. you may need to look into multisampling to know the right approach of doing so, there may even be software to automate some of the sampling serum presets part of the process.

Answers

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    Asdr1204Asdr1204 United StatesPosts: 4

    @reza said:
    serum and the deluge are different synth engines, so you can't simply drag presets from serum to the deluge.

    you're options are carefully trying to recreate presets by copying what settings a preset has on serum and finding it's parameter's counterpart and values on the deluge or sampling various notes of the serum preset and loading as a multisample preset on the deluge. you may need to look into multisampling to know the right approach of doing so, there may even be software to automate some of the sampling serum presets part of the process.

    I didn't know what multi-sampling was and audio sample options, but looks like in the manual page 186, "Recording an audio sample into a synth". I think this could work for me, Thanks!

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    darwiniandudedarwiniandude South AustraliaPosts: 2

    I guess you’ve probably got somewhere already since your post, but checkout the excellent multi sampling on deluge video by Mr Wiggly on YouTube. Essentially, a single sample can only go so far before you loose the character of the original sound. There are various ways to automate capturing multiple key and velocity ranges to a bunch of WAV files you chuck in a folder on the SD card and load in in one go - you’ll then have a pretty perfect recreation of a sound previously locked inside a plugin like Serum or a software instrument.

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