T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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234.1 | | SPHINX::SAVAGE | | Mon Feb 03 1986 15:29 | 19 |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------
It comes with a little toy size keyboard.
It can sample about 4 seconds at 9.2KHz.
It can't save the sample.
It plays back 4 voice polyphonic.
It doesn't talk or listen to MIDI.
It can only hold one sample at a time.
It's available now from Sam Ash for $89.
The Sam Ash order desk phone number is (800)472-6274.
Dennis Savage
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234.3 | | GALAXY::MALIK | | Mon Feb 03 1986 18:05 | 4 |
|
It's not MIDI? Awww.....
- karl
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234.4 | | SIVA::FEHSKENS | | Tue Feb 04 1986 13:14 | 8 |
| Obviously what we need is a MIDI vorsetzer - you roll it up in front of
your arbitrary keyboard and the 88-fingered wonder responds to MIDI commands
by striking the appropriate keys. I'm only being half-facetious; such
contraptions do exist, driven by piano rolls. (Does this mean somebody's
goinf to have to write a piano roll to MIDI converter - or worse, build
a thing that reads piano rolls and emits MIDI?)
len.
|
234.5 | | AJAX::MALIK | | Tue Feb 04 1986 16:23 | 7 |
| Len,
It's already been done. In the last two Keyboard magazines,
there is an ad offering midi tapes of player piano rolls. The
ad says 'Last night George Gershwin played on my Casio'.
- Karl
|
234.6 | | SIVA::FEHSKENS | | Wed Feb 05 1986 10:26 | 13 |
| I love it when reality outruns my imagination! What I actually had in mind
was a box that you put piano rolls into, with a MIDI output port that you
could plug into a MIDI synth. What's on the tapes - data for a sequencer?
Alternatively, what reads the tapes and converts them to realtime MIDI
signals?
Incidentally vorsetzers do exist. The name is derived from the German verb
meaning "to sit in front of", which they literally do - sit in front of a
piano. I believe Sony makes a cassette driven version; Marantz made a
modification kit for player pianos that was cassette driven. I rapidly
lost interest in vorsetzers with the appearance of MIDI.
len.
|
234.7 | | ERLANG::DICKENS | | Wed Feb 05 1986 12:37 | 2 |
| Ok, but do piano rolls record velocity information ? 8-)
|
234.8 | | SIVA::FEHSKENS | | Wed Feb 05 1986 13:42 | 17 |
| I've often wondered about that. I had always assumed not, that the holes
in the roll just reflected "note ons" and "note offs" in MIDI terminology,
but the ads for the Sony thing strongly implied dynamics. Also some
nut/inventor who made a bunch of "recordings" of famous pianists and
composers playing the piano (back during the early part of the century)
including folks like Rachmaninoff using piano roll technology; Book of the
Month Club issued a set of recordings made from these rolls that purport
to sound just like the artist in question, and I don't see how you could do
that without dynamics. I have the records, and it sure sounds like there's
dynamics. I suppose you could do it with a different encoding scheme, but
remember, these rolls were made a long time ago. maybe the dynamics
are just "terrace" dynamics a la the Baroque era, where you make things
louder by playing more voices.
Does anybody have any real facts?
len.
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234.9 | | GALAXY::MALIK | | Wed Feb 05 1986 17:48 | 17 |
| I don't know how real these facts are, but I do remember
reading that these piano-rolls of famous composers did include
velocity data.
All I remember is something about a pool of mercury below
each key, a rod that was driven into it, and some kind of electrical
measurement.
I'll see if I can find some information about this in my music
encyclopedia.
- Karl
p.s. Re; 'when reality surpasses my imagination' -- this happens to
me on a minute by minute basis.
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234.10 | | SAUTER::SAUTER | | Thu Feb 06 1986 09:39 | 10 |
| I have obtained the "demo disk" from the company that sells
``piano rolls'' on floppy. It does not contain velocity
information. I talked to the company that produces it. They
said they have a machine that translates piano rolls into a byte
stream.
In spite of the lack of velocity information and the large time
quantum (39 milliseconds) the thing sounds pretty good. If you'd
like a demo I gave the disk to Daddy's Junky Music in Nashua.
John Sauter
|
234.12 | | SIVA::FEHSKENS | | Fri Feb 07 1986 13:25 | 4 |
| yeah, Duo-Art sounds right; I'll check the album and see if it says anything
useful.
len.
|
234.14 | Anyone play with one of these? | MIDAS::RHODES | | Tue Jul 15 1986 09:35 | 17 |
| Has anyone purchased one of these little things to play with?
I may be interested in getting one to sample my mono analog guitar
synth if the sample quality is any good. This would enable me to
effectively get 4 voice poly out of a mono synth - great for a
backround analog string patch or some such track. The little keyboard
doesn't bother me if it is used just to bang out chords (I used
to play an accordian with a smaller keyboard).
Has anyone tried sampling anything with an external mic?
Is the sampling quality any good?
Todd.
Todd.
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234.15 | A Truly Amazing New Toy!! | COROT::CERTO | | Fri Jul 18 1986 18:47 | 26 |
| I bought one of these things last week at Wurlitzer's in Boston.
It's really neat, it has external input and mike input as well as
a built in mike. You should hear it through a good amp and speakers.
I've sampled my synth, the CD player and lots of friends making
wierd noises. The sound is quite usable considering the 9.5k hz
sampling rate (and the price). You wouldn't want to use it for
cymbals or anything, but a polyphonic guitar or synth line is cool;
it sounds like you ran it through an effect; accurate reproduction
no, by very usful.
Check out the pre-defined sounds, most are sampled, sound better than user
samples: piano is great, trumpet, brass section: good, human voices:
for novelty only.
It also has a build in poly sequencer: nice, and a toy drum section.
Overall this unit is a thoroughly amazing toy! It's very close
to being real. It really makes you wonder why others charge
Twenty times this for a "real" synth when the functionality is
so similar.
Fredric DVINCI::CERTO
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234.16 | MIDI VERSION, TOO! (real soon now!) | LEAGLE::GOLDSTEIN | Rich Goldstein | Mon Jul 21 1986 15:36 | 13 |
|
As a piece of side information, I called CASIO a few weeks ago to
get information about this unit and the woman on the phone said
that I should note that it was not a MIDI unit, but that they were
planning on coming out with a similar unit with MIDI in the near
future.
I know nothing else.
(Really! %^) )
Rich Goldstein
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234.17 | How to create waveforms?? | CGHUB::IBBETT | OIS Performance Group | Wed Jul 23 1986 08:45 | 25 |
| Echo the comments in .15 - amazing for the price. I got some nice
results from sampling such things as my Strat (out-of-phase, ala
Mark Knopfler), a friend's sax and a blues harp. It also allows
you to modify the ADSR envelope of the sampled sound, and any of
the pre-set sounds. Further, you can create waveforms from a
fundamental plus varying levels of harmonics. Herein lies my question,
which I am sure some of you music theory folks can answer...
I recall from my (scant) knowlege of theory how to create a square
wave and a sawtooth by combining a fundamental plus various levels
of selected harmonics. I cannot remember/figure-out how to create
a triangle wave. Can it be done using ONLY similarly phased sine
waves (i.e. no COSINES or partial phase shifts) ?
I would be real greatful for any info - I have written a small hack
Basic program that generates waveforms and displays them via callable
DECgraph and allows building of waveforms based upon the 'limitations'
of the Casio unit, but have so far failed to get close to a Triangle
wave. Ideally I would like to know the algorithm, e.g.
10 * SIN F + 5 * SIN 3F + ....
Any ideas??
Tnx 1.0E+6, Jimi.
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234.19 | Fourier series for Triangle wave | HYDRA::AURENZ | Scot Aurenz, Ltn2-2/h7, 226-6342 | Wed Jul 23 1986 15:23 | 30 |
|
>A triangle can be made with only odd harmonics, the amplitude is the
>reciprocal of the order.
Close, Tom, only my book says that for a triangle wave
the amplitude falls off as the *square* of the harmonic's
order, i.e., The following "C-like" code:
--------------------------------------
float x, t, T;
int i, HarNum;
x = 0.0;
for(i=0; i<N; i++)
{
HarNum = 2*i - 1;
x += 1./(HarNum*HarNum) * cos( (2*pi/T) * HarNum * t);
}
--------------------------------------
This generates one sample of a triangle wave (at time t)
which contains N odd harmonics.
Now I have a question for .-2: Please tell me more about this
"callable DECgraph" ? I have a vt125, and have been looking
for a way to plot signals without writing my own graphing
program. How do you feed it inputs, etc?
Scot
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234.20 | If it only had permanent memory | BAILEY::RHODES | | Wed Jul 23 1986 15:27 | 18 |
| Geez, if the darn thing could just "remember" a sample. What is the
point of sampling an instrument (ie Sax, piano) when you can't save
it beyond power-down. Might as well put the instrument direct to
tape, rather than the sample. The instrument's right there in the
room anyways. The main power of sampling is being able to recreate
sounds that you as an individual don't have access to on a daily
basis. ...although modifying envelopes can probably be useful for
subtle effects.
Maybe the new one will have a tape interface, or is MIDI all it
takes (IE: can the Mirage save samples to disk via MIDI)?
I don't know what I'm complaining about. The darn thing can be had
for a lousy 80 bucks. Could end up being an investment if one learns
enough about sampling to make a good choice on a MIDI one in the future.
Todd.
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234.23 | If you buy 2 are they 16 bit? | JAWS::COTE | Well, we're gonna have a wing-ding... | Mon Oct 20 1986 11:35 | 9 |
| Couldn't resist.... $89.00 @ Service Merchandise.
Imagine what you could do with a Mirage....
Sample 88 note "elbow chord"
Play it back with one note!
Use the polyphonic keyboard and get 704!!
Edd
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234.25 | Catalog Showroom... | JAWS::COTE | Well, we're gonna have a wing-ding... | Mon Oct 20 1986 12:31 | 7 |
| There's one in the Natick/Framingham area.
Also one in Auburn.
Many more....
They're alot like weeds.....
Edd
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234.26 | Finer Resolution pointer | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Mon Oct 20 1986 17:24 | 3 |
| More specifically, it's in that nondescript "mall" over by the Natick
Hilton, across Speen Street from Sears and the balloon bread bakery.
|
234.27 | crossroads mall | APOLLO::DEHAHN | | Tue Oct 21 1986 09:27 | 3 |
|
CdH
|
234.28 | I'm confused! | REGENT::SCHMIEDER | | Tue Oct 21 1986 10:54 | 28 |
| Yes, the mall that you can only get to from the Rt.9 Beetleback intersection.
It's a very complex manoeuvre.
Anyway, I'm confused. What does this Casio sampler give me that the
combination of my Korg SDD-2000 8-second digital delay/sampler and CZ-101
doesn't? I haven't used the sampler portion of my Korg yet, so don't know
if it records in internal RAM or requires a cartridge or some other interface
for storage. Likewise with the Casio sampler. I'm interested in being able
to recall sounds that are stored in an easily retrievable place, playing them
back at any desired pitch. I would of course save more than one pitch of the
original sound for a more natural scalar progression. Rack-mount and floor
pedal samplers all seem to require manually changing the rate to change
pitch. The Korg is MIDI, but I don't understand whether playing a key on
the CASIO automatically selects the right tone of the sampled sound. The
Casio sampler apparantly does.
I'm willing to spend $90 for this functionality while saving up for an
Ensoniq Mirage (or microcomputer if that turns out to be the better route),
if I don't already have it with the Korg and CZ-101 combination.
This probably seems selfish to pose such a question, but I know most of you
already know the answer at the tip of your tongues and I really hate wasting
time learning technology. What little spare time I have I prefer investing
in practicing the bass, or occasionally the guitar or one of my other
instruments.
Mark
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234.29 | Casi SZ-1 NOT MIDI | PIXEL::COHEN | Richard Cohen | Tue Oct 21 1986 11:27 | 8 |
| Mark,
The problem is that the Casio sampler is not MIDI. If you are
going for a MIDI setup, do not bother (although I have a good time
whenever I visit Lechmere...)
- Rick
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