Computer Music

WHAT’S ON YOUR DRIVE

RÜFÜS

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We get the lowdown on the chilled Aussie trio’s favourite bits of kit from keyboardis­t Jon George

ABLETON LIVE When I was kid, I started out on Cubase and got all my info and tutorials from Computer Music! It took about a year to click, but then I went on to learn Pro Tools and now the band has all settled on Ableton. When we’re not in the studio, we can swap files so easily with Ableton – it’s been a godsend. ARTURIA JUPITER 8V I love soft synths, but if I’m being brutally honest, we spend a lot of time in the studio trying to get soft synths to sound like analogue synths – warping them, adding huge chorus effects and even sticking them through analogue preamps. All to get that little bit of extra warmth. IK MULTIMEDIA CSR HALL REVERB The wrong reverb can feel really, really cheesy, but there’s so much depth and space in the CSR – we’ve put it on a lot of different instrument­s and it always seems to make whatever it’s on sound so much cooler. WAVES MERCURY BUNDLE The thing about compressor­s, EQs and saturators – all those tools that turn an idea into a finished song – is that you’ve got to feel comfortabl­e with them. If you’re always struggling to get it to do what it’s supposed to, you’ll start looking elsewhere. You never get that problem with Waves; so intuitive and immediate.

“It always seems to make whatever it’s on sound so much cooler”

ROB PAPEN SUBBOOMBAS­S This gets used a lot; for the main bassline as well as the sub. We might occasional­ly add a hardware top bassline – something like the MS-20 or the Mopho – but we always end up filtering out the bottom end and letting the SubBoom do all the bass work.

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