
Sound Design - Ambient Pads and Atmospheres
7 capitulos
- Introduction and Series OverviewTopic FocusContinuing the sound design series with focus on ambient and organic pad sounds using Serum synth and electric guitar techniques.Sound Previews• Three synthesized pad sounds demonstrating the range of textures • One guitar-based atmospheric sound showing alternative approachesLearning ResourcesProject files, MIDI, presets, and guitar recordings available for free download to follow along with the lesson.Teaching ApproachEmphasis on understanding the why and how behind each sound design choice rather than just copying techniques.
- Creating the Smooth Pad SoundCore PrincipleStart with a rich, bright, buzzy oscillator or wavetable that contains lots of energy, then filter and process to achieve the final smooth sound.Initial Setup• Set attack and release to 400-500 milliseconds for pleasant sound • Increase unison voices to odd numbers (5, 7, or 9) for solid centered voice with spreading voices • Select bright wavetables like PWM Juno synth for nice textureRefinement Techniques• Morph wavetable position using LFO or envelope for gradual changes • Apply subtle detuning with LFO to fine-tune parameter simulating analog oscillator drift • Use low-pass filter (MG Low 12 or 18) to remove high frequenciesEffects Processing• Add large reverb with high mix amount and low-cut to prevent rumbling • Apply EQ to reduce excess low-end • Use stereo imager to bring the distant sound closer and wider
- Building the Organic Unstable PadDefining CharacteristicsOrganic pad has roughness and instability with an edgy quality, contrasting with the heavenly smooth pad sound.Key Sound Shaping• Use even number of unison voices (4 voices) instead of odd to create instability and phase-like quality • Quick attack time for responsive sound (adjustable based on song context) • Good attack and release to prevent abrupt on/off jumpsFilter and EQ StrategyApply 18 dB low-pass filter for more pronounced cutoff point that aggressively cuts high frequencies while maintaining character.Mix Integration• Add reverb inside synth followed by EQ • Cut low-end to avoid clashing with other bass elements • Apply stereo imager for width and fullness
- Drifting Keys Pad SoundSound CharacterBlends key and pad sound together creating a drifting, ethereal texture that works well when layered with other pads.Attack Variation• Short attack creates a blob synth effect suitable as main instrument • Long attack makes sound rise gently and subtly, less obtrusive in mixDesign PhilosophyGeneral synth sounds become pads when filtered and given long attack times, demonstrating versatility of basic synthesis techniques.AvailabilityFull preset available for download to deconstruct and study the detailed sound design at your own pace.
- Guitar-Based Atmospheric PadSource MaterialElectric guitar with humbucker pickups played into a DI box, starting before the beat to allow for envelope shaping.Attack Removal• Use gain plugin with envelope starting at zero to fade in the guitar signal • Eliminates sharp plucking attack while preserving tonal content • Creates smooth swell rather than percussive beginningSpatial Processing• EQ to clean up low-end frequencies • Stereo imager to expand guitar from mono center to surrounding, atmospheric width • Reverb triggered only by the swell, not the initial attack, for beautiful ambient decayCreative Applications• Not limited to guitar—works with piano, arpeggios, vocal samples, or vocal chants • Works with strummed or plucked chords and single notes • Key technique: remove attack, add reverb and filtering for atmospheric results
- Advanced Guitar Processing and TechniquesEffect Chain DetailsVolume envelope starts at zero and rises at the beat start, EQ for cleanup, stereo imager for width, reverb for ambience.Reverb Selection• Demonstrates use of Slate Digital Verb Sweet Classics plugin • Epic Synth Space preset creates desired tone and texture • Reverb settings create beautiful ambient swell and decayCritical Timing ElementVolume envelope prevents reverb from being triggered by initial attack of guitar strings, allowing reverb to swell gently instead of following the pluck.Comparing ApproachesWithout volume envelope, reverb follows the sharp attack creating different character. With envelope, creates smooth atmospheric effect suited to ambient textures.
- Concluding Principles and Creative ApplicationsUniversal FormulaStart with basic sound playing chords, melody, or single note; add reverb and filtering to transform into pad texture.Core Technique• Attack removal is key—fade in rather than jump in • Heavy reverb creates ambient character • Filtering shapes the tone and removes brightnessInstrument FlexibilityTechnique applies to any source: synthesizers, guitars, pianos, vocal samples, chants, or any musical element in your song.Final EncouragementDespite sounding complex and intimidating, the core process is simple and not super complicated—experiment and creative approach yields rich, full pad sounds.





