by galaxiesmerge » Tue Jan 08, 2013 10:38 pm
FYI: The later versions of the sound were reproduced on KYMA CAPYBARA.
http://www.symbolicsound.com/press-THX.html
Not many people know what you have just pointed to and few even would believe it.
THe thing about old systems is that they were all *offline*
I myself used C-Sound and you could run an offline process pretending that you ha 192KHz converters back in the day (which, back then, was impossible).
A few folks knew - those that had a relationship with Stanford or IRCAM or Amblin / Lucasfilm knew also as well as a rare few others.
Then a number of folks got to know.
But the thing about this is that they got lucky ... there was a lot of experimentation an and they got lucky.
Today, with SOLARIS you could get lucky a lot more often
FYI: The later versions of the sound were reproduced on KYMA CAPYBARA. http://www.symbolicsound.com/press-THX.html
Not many people know what you have just pointed to and few even would believe it.
THe thing about old systems is that they were all *offline*
I myself used C-Sound and you could run an offline process pretending that you ha 192KHz converters back in the day (which, back then, was impossible).
A few folks knew - those that had a relationship with Stanford or IRCAM or Amblin / Lucasfilm knew also as well as a rare few others.
Then a number of folks got to know.
But the thing about this is that they got lucky ... there was a lot of experimentation an and they got lucky.
Today, with SOLARIS you could get lucky a lot more often :)
[quote="darkshine75011"]Hello John
there is a rumor that the THX sound created by Synclavier or CS-80
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7aRHIcgBpms
nothing like
This is a DSP computer like Solaris 8)
Story of the THX sound :
http://musicthing.blogspot.fr/2005/05/tiny-music-makers-pt-3-thx-sound.html
the random parameters have the success, some develop uses this trick like sonicProjects
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mAry3nbsGAM[/quote]