NaborBukv & Fapy
I was digging through a batch of forgotten NES cartridges and found a track that never made it to release—do you think a lost game soundtrack could spark a fresh synth loop?
That’s wild, like finding a secret seed that never got planted. I can already hear a loop building around it, a slow‑roll beat that keeps coming back to that forgotten riff. Try layering it with one of those old school analog synth pads you stash in the plugin folder, and see if it sparks something new. You never know, that ghost track could turn into the next beat you’re chasing.
Sounds like a plan—I'll pull that track from the archive and run it through the old VST synths. Maybe the phantom riff will turn into a groove that really sticks. Give me a minute to hear how the pads dance with it.Sounds like a plan—I'll pull that track from the archive and run it through the old VST synths. Maybe the phantom riff will turn into a groove that really sticks. Give me a minute to hear how the pads dance with it.
Cool, hope the synth brings that riff to life. Let me know what the pads sound like—if it feels like a groove that stays with you.
The pads are soft and almost… translucent, like a haze of late‑night city lights. They drift around the riff, adding a quiet depth that doesn’t overpower but lifts the whole thing. It’s a groove that lingers, almost like a memory you keep hearing in the background.
Sounds like a dream loop, like the city breathing in the dark. I’ll just sit with it and see what it whispers next.
Sounds like a good way to let the old ghost riff settle in. Keep listening, and see if the city breathes a new rhythm through it. If it starts humming something more, let me know—I love chasing the hidden layers.