I just uploaded a new track:
https://soundcloud.com/lminiero/maelstrom
I had the ostinato riff in mind for quite some time, and it immediately gave me the idea of a maelstrom, one of those huge whirlpools drawing things in. Since it would be the same thing over and over building up, I felt a more electronic approach could be interesting, and as a result it's the most synth-heavy thing I ever wrote: initially, the plan was to write an Industrial Metal track (heavy guitars with electronic/techno background), but it ended up being something more "space" or progressive metal oriented, as it reminds me a bit of Space Martini by Derek Sherinian (with all the due distinctions, considering that track is played by monsters!). At a certain point, I was afraid that I was actually coming up with a new 2 Unlimited hit
There's a LOT of Yoshimi tracks here, which I hope will make @folderol happy
For drums, I wanted to experiment more too. A friend recently told me my drums tracks are always boring and very predictable, which I gues makes sense considering I make use of Hydrogen and patterns a lot, even though I usually try to write more than one pattern. So this time I decided to still use Hydrogen, but write A TON of additional patterns instead, and sometime mix them up a bit. I probably got carried away too much, but it does feel more "organic" and real than what I usually write. I added some saturation to make them louder, and possibly better fit the vibe of the song.
I initially wanted guitars to sound very heavy (pretty much a must for Industrial), but I couldn't find something heavy enough and that I could still "control" when playing, and so I went up to the same effect I always use, but with more reverb and delay. I think they do fit the bill, even though the overall mix may be a bit too cluttered (also considering the amount of synths in there). For the solo, I used the same exact pipeline I always use: I like the sound, and didn't feel there was a need to change that. I didn't add any real bass guitar here, instead, considering the synths did a good job at giving a foundation already.
Hope you'll enjoy it!