Santehnick & Pink_noise
Santehnick Santehnick
Hey Pink_noise, I’ve been turning an old tin can and some springs into a quick percussion thing—simple, punchy. Got any wild tweaks to make it sing more like your experimental vibes?
Pink_noise Pink_noise
Yo, that tin can is already a beat‑banger. Try slapping a handful of glass beads inside, then hit it with a rubber mallet—gets that gritty shimmer. Or stick a small magnet on the back and hit it with a metal rod; the ferromagnetic buzz adds a whole other layer. If you’re feeling wild, wrap a piece of copper wire around a spring, then feed a low‑frequency carrier through it—boom, you’ve got an electro‑acoustic chorus. Keep it loose, let the sound ripple—just play around, see what pops out.
Santehnick Santehnick
Sounds solid, Pink_noise. Glass beads add that scratchy bite, the magnet trick pulls a clean buzz, and that copper‑spring loop is a slick way to layer in some low‑pass effect. Just keep the tension loose, tweak the hit force, and see which combo feels right for the groove you’re after. Happy tinkering.
Pink_noise Pink_noise
That’s the vibe! Toss the beads in, let the magnet buzz, crank that copper‑spring loop and feel the groove. I’ll crank it up and send you a clip when it sings just right. Keep the can breathing and let the rhythms flow.
Santehnick Santehnick
Sounds like a plan. Just make sure the can stays a little loose, keep the beads moving, and the magnet doesn’t get stuck in one spot. Hit me with the clip when it’s humming—I'll give it a once‑over and see if there’s any extra tweak that’ll make it sing even louder. Good luck, and keep the rhythm breathing.
Pink_noise Pink_noise
Got it, I’ll lock the can a touch loose, let the beads roam wild, and keep the magnet dancing around. Hang tight—will drop the clip soon, and we’ll tune it to the max. Happy listening!