Leo’s workstation was a beige Pentium II running Windows 98. His tools: a Turtle Beach Pinnacle sound card with a proprietary S/PDIF input, a copy of Chicken Systems Translator , and a mountain of pirated RAM. His process was monastic.
Leo smiles. “That’s it,” he whispers. “That’s the sound.” Ensoniq TS-10 SoundFont -SF2-
Leo did the unthinkable. He bought a used TS-10 from a pawn shop on Santa Monica Blvd using his rent money. He spent 72 hours straight re-sampling. He survived on cold pizza and Jolt Cola. On the final hour, he triggered a low C on the "ResoReese" bass patch. The sound was a perfect, snarling, detuned monster. He saved the final SF2 file. Total size: 148MB. He named it . Leo’s workstation was a beige Pentium II running
The SF2 format allowed for up to 27 different modulators. The TS-10 had 16 real-time controllers. Leo spent two weeks just mapping the aftertouch to filter cutoff response. On the TS-10, it was exponential—a light touch added warmth, a hard squeeze added bite. In SF2, he had to build a piecewise linear curve. He failed. Then he failed again. Finally, he wrote a custom script in an ancient version of Python that brute-force calculated 128 breakpoints. At 4 AM on a Tuesday, he played the converted patch. He pressed down on his MIDI keyboard’s aftertouch. The sound screamed . He cried. Just a little. Leo smiles
Three months in, with 47 patches converted, a power surge fried his Pinnacle card. The hard drive with the raw samples was corrupted. He had backups of the loops, but the original multi-samples—the 2,000+ individual notes—were gone. The TS-10 was a rental. It was due back in two days.