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Look in the top left corner of serum click the thing you want to automate, click the arrow in the top left and click browse parameters, then click on the parameter you want and right click create automation.
Serum Macro Automation Inc
It makes for a tidier session instead of having many lanes of automation and different effects open, you can close them and just have the Macros (and Macro automation) on display. Check out the quick tutorial below to get to know how to use them! Jul 19, 2016 I just recently figured out how to automate Serum in Fl studio. Hope you like it. Make sure to subscribe to see my new tracks and tutorials.
Serum Macro Automation Companies
Get Riddim Revolution for Serum here: https://www.ghosthack.de/riddim-revolution/Riddim dubstep is the new kid on the block that EDM artists can't get enough of in the moment.That's why we created the Riddim Revolution - an astonishing preset pack full of heavy bass and synth patches for Serum!Expect 50 patches created with great care by our talented sound designers and full macro controls for perfect customization and automation.Get the latest sounds from famous electronic artists like Excision, Virtual Riot, Bar9, Zomboy, Phase One and Barely Alive.Learn how to create chart-hitting bass sounds in Serum by reverse engineer our patches!
Serum Macro Automation Tutorial
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- Riddim
Comment by Reaper
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ULTRA-CLEAN OSCILLATORS
Playback of wavetables requires digital resampling to play different frequencies. Without considerable care and a whole lot of number crunching, this process will create audible artifacts. Artifacts mean that you are (perhaps unknowingly) crowding your mix with unwanted tones / frequencies. Many popular wavetable synthesizers are astonishingly bad at suppressing artifacts - even on a high-quality setting some create artifacts as high as -36 dB to -60 dB (level difference between fundamental on artifacts) which is well audible, and furthermore often dampening the highest wanted audible frequencies in the process, to try and suppress this unwanted sound. In Serum, the native-mode (default) playback of oscillators operates with an ultra high-precision resampling, yielding an astonishingly inaudible signal-to-noise (for instance, -150 dB on a sawtooth played at 1 Khz at 44100)! This requires a lot of calculations, so Serum’s oscillator playback has been aggressively optimized using SSE2 instructions to allow for this high-quality playback without taxing your CPU any more than the typical (decent quality) soft synth already does. Load up Serum and we think you’ll be able to notice both what you hear (solid high frequencies, extending flat all the way up to the limits of hearing) as well as what you don’t hear (no unwanted mud or aliasing gibberish- just good, clean sound).