Short answer, I’m afraid I do not. I think in almost all cases the only audio he sampled directly from the show was the vocals, so the audio must have come from somewhere else

Let’s take the example of Your Faithful Student. In the first twenty seconds or so, we hear chimes, then a chime glissando (that’s like when you run your fingers along a piano and hit all the keys in sequence), the same chime glissando but slowed down, some electronic bzzts, a half-glissando into a bell ringing, a bit of trumpet, drums, synths, and so on into stuff I can hardly describe



There are three main ways to get pretty noises in music. And I believe all are used in this song



A sample is a recording of some real instrument being played in some way. The chimes could have come as a sample, such as these which showed up as the top result in a search for “glissando chimes”. In fact I’d bet money those are the same chimes as appear in the song. Free sound packs for staples of music like this are common, and very easy to find once you know how to describe them A soundfont is a series of short samples mapped to a bunch of keyboard keys. Then you can play them like a piano or something, but unlike a piano, when you hit a key it’s a specific sound that plays for a set duration of time. So in general you couldn’t hold down a key to get an extended note or anything



This would, however, be a quick way to get a huge array of miscellaneous electronic chirps and noises literally at your fingertips. I’d say it’s probably likely that all the little sounds that only seem to occur once in some degree of isolation are from samples or soundfonts. In some cases he may done something like take a sample of a drum beat and speed it up, who knows



A glissando could be made manually with a chime soundfont, but that would take a lot more effort than just searching for samples of chimes, and maybe never sound as good as the real thing

A virtual instrument (VSTi) is a fancy program that generates sounds just like those from real instruments, but they aren’t samples. You can tune the individual parameters to a fine degree, and introduce effects that you can hear changing the sound in realtime. Synths, drums, pianos, trumpets; all typically made using a VI. So the majority of the song is probably done with these



Most music programs, such as FL Studio (which is still our best guess for SGaP’s software), come with some builtin soundpacks, soundfonts, and virtual instruments. Since, as far as we know, this was only the second song SGaP made, I would not be surprised if most of the sounds in this particular track were from sources easily accessed either straight out of the program, or maybe through a community library. After a while he may have figured out better places to look or techniques to use, but for his earlier works I’d imagine it’s mostly stock and defaults