

John is also roster of Ninja Tune's imprint Just Isn't Music, alongside artists like Amon Tobin, Bonobo, Flying Lotus and The Cinematic Orchestra. John's clientele includes prestigious brands like Native Instruments, Ableton, Soundiron, Virgin, Amazon Prime Video, Vice Magazine and BBC. From his Athens based studio, he delivers scoring, foley and sound design services for many local and international clients. John is a Greek-born composer, producer and sound designer. Jewel Bandolero was recorded by John Valasis. You can also use our customizable arpeggiator, with a built-in velocity sequencer table and control over arp direction, note timing, swing, randomization and duration. You can also apply your choice of 13 lowpass, high-pass and FX filter, with assignable modulation control options, including velocity, modwheel, expression, after-touch, key position and step-sequencer table control. You’ll also find an adaptable LFO system, with selectable LFO shape, modulation target parameter, speed, intensity, tempo-syncing and fade-in time. The "Glide" control slider allows you to play legato and portamento leads. You have control over Volume, Attack, Release, Transient Offset, Vibrato and Octave layering. We’ve packed the GUI with lots of great sound-shaping controls that give you the flexibility to warp the sound in many ways. Jewel Bandolero offers an exploration of a classic combo organ, complete with warm tonal colors ready to complement any genre of music.

After that, we crafted twenty evolving ambient pads from the source content to enhance versatility. We recorded the instrument articulations in wide stereo and direct line in. Our library includes synth sustains, staccatos, and “Magic Chords” dialed in from the organ, and 41 tempo-syncable drum machine loops. It featured a 49-key keyboard and drum/rhythm machine, as well as a variety of knobs and faders to control layer volume, instrument type, accompaniment, and tempo.

This Italian synthesizer was introduced to the market by the Galanti Group in the early 1970s. Jewel Bandolero captures the vintage analog sounds of the distinctive Gem Rodeo 49.
