T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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253.1 | Hybrid Arts + 520ST | CACHE::FONTAINE | | Fri Feb 21 1986 14:05 | 27 |
| Before you spend the money on a MAC and the Southworth software,
take a look at the Hybrid Arts software for the 520ST. It won't
be available until April, but from what I gather from talking to
the people at Hybrid Arts it sounds very similar to the Southworth
package. I have looked at the literature on the Southworth software
and it does look very good. You'll have a better chance of comparing
the two when next months issue of Keyboard comes out. Hybrid is
suppose to have an ad in it for their 520 stuff. ( Capacity for
the sequencer is something like 50,000 notes. 200,000 if you wait
for the 1040ST. They say it will hold a 2 hour movie score. ) They
also have a voicing/librarian program for the DX/TX synths available
now. It's called DX-DROID and employs a form of AI that actually
will program sounds for you based on other sounds in the library.
Also available in the April time frame, a waveform editor for the
Mirage called Oasis. Also in the works, a generic patch
editor/librarian configurable for any synth.
I've heard good reports from people that have used the old Hybrid
software on the 8-bit Atari's. If it is anything like the old stuff
( and I'm sure it will be much better ) it should be a great package.
They say that they ARE taking full advantage of the 520s great
graphics.
If you're looking at full list prices on both machines ( MAC+
+ software vs 520 + software ) the 520 system will be about $1500-
$2000 cheaper. The number for Hybrid Arts is (213)826-3777. Have
fun deciding. I know what I'm buying.
Andre
|
253.2 | considered Musicworks' stuff? | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Sat Feb 22 1986 14:05 | 15 |
| Brad,
I also have a Mac, have considered Total Music, but am leaning
towards (haven't made the decision yet) Musicworks' MegaTracks+.
In most aspects, they are similar, but I think Musiciworks'
stuff has the edge because it can transfer your piece to a Professional
Composer file, which has the best notation software I have seen.
If you've considered Musicworks' and rejected them , I'd be
interested in hearing your reasons.
Their phone number (in Boston) is (617) 266-2886.
- Karl
|
253.3 | Check out Professional Performer | VISION::KAUFMANN | | Tue Feb 25 1986 12:34 | 15 |
| I understand that there is a follow-on to "Professional Composer"
called "Professional Performer" and that the combo has been chosen
by some over "Total Music". The line on "Total Music" is that
is (was?) the standard of excellence for such packages. All
this is third-hand info.
BTW: "Total Music" is written in FORTH and is not likely to be ported
to any other devices. Bill Southworth is focusing on the "high-end"
of this market - motion picture studios and the like. This is
second-hand info.
As for me, I'm trying to track down a dealer for the Hinton MIDIC
to see if I can hook it up to my Rainbow. I'll hack around on
my own until I save up for an appropriate music computer. Of
course at 300 pounds the MIDIC ain't cheap.
|
253.4 | 3 systems | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Tue Feb 25 1986 14:23 | 27 |
|
Yes, Performer (by Mark of the Unicorn) is another option.
Musicworks poo-poos Performer because it does not have graphic
representation. And that concerns me.
What all of their brochures fail to make clear is the ease of
moving between editing notation and hearing it. Since Performer
does not have a graphic display at all, I would have to 'convert'
it to Professional Composer format (and then presumably boot PC
and edit the file and then convert it back into Performer); this
sounds incredibly tedious.
I *think* Total music allows you to edit music notation and
hear it without any conversion, but, in all their ads, I have yet
to see even a triplet, much less anything rhythmically complex.
MegaTracks+ offers a compromise. It has a semi-musical graphic
notation that can edited and immediately heard. Then when you are
happy with the result, you can dump it to Professional Composer
(which they support) and edit it in musical notation. The edited
(and printable) score can then be converted back to megatracks for
further input or editing.
Sure wish some store had these systems set up side-by-side so
I could do a comparison.
- Karl
|
253.5 | Just called Hybrid Arts, and ... | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad Schafer | Tue Feb 25 1986 14:48 | 39 |
| Re: -1 Comparison
AMEN! I've been driving all over the place just to find places that
know anything at all about these packages, much less have them in stock
for demo. 8^(
Re: .3 (I hope) 520 Based Stuff
I just got off the phone with Hybrid Arts. Man, that new stuff sounds
incredible! I think my mind may have been changed. Here's the deal:
The software is essentially MIDI TRACK III with some enhancements.
Unfortunately, I talked to a techno-dweebe, so I couldn't really get
everything I wanted. Don't know about notation or any of that jazz.
Note capacity is 80-100K notes for 520. It will "sync to anything".
That means SMPTE, Roland, external clock, etc.
Price (including 520ST, monitor, kybd, external disk drive, and
sequencer s/w) is $1390. Not bad, considering the MAC/Southworth is
currently $1899 (my best price, anyway).
Probably the most remarkable thing is the "trade up" deal they're
offering. If you buy the current system (130XE & MT III) for $697,
they'll give you that amount in credit toward the 520 based system if
you buy it this calendar year, and you get to keep, sell, or burn the
130 system! That's kind of incredible, if you ask me. That means that
you can get used to the 130 based s/w now, and upgrade to the 520
system when it's released for $694. Since I've not used MIDI Track,
I'll have to find someplace/one that has. More footwork >8^(
520 system is available in May (.NOT. holding_breath) As for DX-Droid,
no time frame was given, but the price is $244. Not bad for a system
employing some AI. Wonder how slow it is ...
BTW - I think the Atari uses 5.25 inch floppies. That means I can
finally do something useful with my old distributions of P/OS ;^)
Brad
|
253.6 | Sliced bread | RSTS32::DBMILLER | | Tue Feb 25 1986 21:36 | 12 |
| RE: Hybrid Arts
If anyone knows of anyplace where I can check out the 130XL package,
I'd like to know. I've been itching to get something, and it looks
like we may need to get a new keyboard player. Maybe if the software
is good, we'll be able to do it ourselves! (If anyone knows of
a good keyboard player in Southern NH/Northern Mass - let me know)
The trade-up deal sounds like the best thing since sliced bread.
-Dave
|
253.7 | It's true | RSTS32::DBMILLER | Formerly GROK::MILLER (Notes-11 land) | Thu Feb 27 1986 00:37 | 53 |
| Unbelievable.
I just called Hybrid Arts myself - wanted to verify that the upgrade
deal was for real, and was told exactly the same thing. If I can
talk them into giving me a trial period with the 130XE, I may send
for it.
The XE advertisement itself is pretty much unreal, and the head
of the sales department was extremely enthusiastic about the product.
The following is right out of the advertisment:
Note capacity of 10,500 notes, or 21,000 MIDI events.
16 plyphonic, multifunction tracks.
Overdub capability on any track.
Real time or step edit recording.
Velocity encoding. Allows velocity to be set, or to raise or
lower relative velocity. Even reassignment of velocity for
automated mixing.
Built-in digital delay. Allows any track to be copied, prelayed
or delayed by any increment, velocity adjusted, and recombined.
Records the full MIDI spec including all program changes, pitch
wheel, plus all 128 MIDI controllers (mod wheel, breath controller,
sustain pedal, volume for automated mix, etc.) With the ability
to enable and disable on both record and playback.
(Other features were listed, but those seemed the most interesting)
Synchronization Features:
Sync to tape with or without a drum machine.
Master or slave, internal/external sync.
MIDI clock sync.
Lock up (Without locate) to SYMPTE.
Locks to all drum machines, even the low cost (one clock per
beat) machines.
Simultaneously outputs:MIDI, clock, beat, and Roland sync.
Other features:
Remotely starts and stops both MIDI and non-MIDI drum machines
and keyboards.
Patch selection from computer or master synth.
Tempo adjustment during recording/playback.
They also have a BBS with DX/CZ patches, songs, and MIDI information.
Hybrid Arts Inc.
11920 W. Olympic Blvd.
Los Angeles, Ca. 90064
Main office: (213) 826-3777 Computer: (213) 826-4288
|
253.8 | Sliced bread, here I come | RSTS32::DBMILLER | Formerly GROK::MILLER | Fri Feb 28 1986 00:42 | 12 |
| Well, I got the head of the sales department to OK the deal for
me to get a 14-day trial period with the software. If I don't
like it (Which the guy seriously doubts, as I do too) or if I
find any bugs in the software, I can return it for my money back.
I'm having it shipped COD since I don't have a major credit card
to charge it on. It should be here by the end of next week. When
it comes in and I've had a chance to mess with it, I'll post a
review in a separate note.
Taking the plunge,
-Dave
|
253.9 | New Magazine features Software | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Tue Mar 18 1986 08:59 | 12 |
| There's a new magazine out called "Keyboards, Computers and Software"
(I think that's what the S was for) that features an extensive
enumeration of software available for Macs, Apple IIs, C64s, IBM
PCs and Amigas in its first issue. There's not much else to recommend
the first issue (the only other article of note is an unexceptional
review of the CZ-5000), but this enumeration is helpful.
MIDI guitarists should also check out the latest Electronic Musician
which features an extensive discussion of MIDI guitar technology.
len.
|
253.10 | Latest word from Hybrid Arts | RSTS32::DBMILLER | Cecil B. D'Miller | Fri May 09 1986 17:11 | 12 |
| I called Hybrid Arts this week. The latest word on the ST software
is that timeframe is now June. I asked what the status is, and
was told that they have it working with 60 tracks now, and they're
pushing for 200 before release! They apparently weren't kidding
when they said you would be able to record a movie score on it.
Still haven't had time to write a good review of the 130XE package,
but I was happy enough with it that I didn't send it back :^)
Patience...
-Dave
|
253.11 | My calendar says **JUNE**!! | BEAGLE::MULELID | | Thu Jun 05 1986 17:40 | 8 |
| So is there any news of the Hybrid Arts midi software, when can
I dust off my ST and get it going. Maybe I should look into the
Steiberg Research "Twenty Four" first. By the way, does anybody
know if the DX-Droid will work with DX21/27/100 also, or just
DX/TX7.
Svein.
|
253.12 | Obviously needs sequencer tutorial... | CANYON::MOELLER | SWAV Software Support | Thu Jun 05 1986 20:52 | 47 |
| Consider a Fat Mac with 2 floppy drives, Opcode MIDI interface and
Opcode MidiMac software. For $1600. Is this any kind of deal? No
printer, plenty of floppies.
Sync-to-tape: are there addons which allow a (FSK?) sync tone to
be recorded on a tape track, and, then when playing back, the sequencer
will sync to it? "to which the sequencer will sync?". The Opcode
interface has 'sync-to-MIDI', but this isn't the same issue, is
it?
Sequencer Track Editing: assume a certain person records a free-form
sequencer track WITHOUT listening to the sequencer's metronome.
Now assume this techno-dweebe wishes to PUNCH IN a part. Since the
sequencer uses BAR/BEAT to keep track of things, and (second-order
assumption) since the metronome and the invisible bar lines are
inextricably linked, would this metronome-ignoring pud be hosed
on punchin/editing issues?
Track Editing II: this maladroit goes on to attempting to segment
and classify the sections of his sequencer (single track)
improvisation. "That's the first theme... that part only occurs
once... second theme...nice improv,like to include this again at
the end as a fade...now I want to hear the first theme again..."
Can this kind of massive compositional reorganization be made if
the original piece was all in one sequence? Especially if the metronome
had been ignored? Can one do this kind of editing inside one sequence,
or would it be better to fragment the piece into multiple sequences,
then link the sequences? Can one record into one sequence, THEN
create multiple sequences out of it? I know this is all software-
dependent, but this kind of functionality is what I WILL be
looking for...
Has anyone done this kinda stuff? After the sequences are linked,
remember this is a single-track 'piano' improv, would the fragmentation
frustrate further orchestration? "this violin line has a legato
phrase which spans the weld between Seq A and Seq C." On another
track, of course, but would all the linked sequences make it a bitch
to do MIDI overdubs?
And, sequencer overdubs complete, THEN the Sync tone on multitrack
becomes important, as this person has many more parts in the sequencer
than MIDI synthesizers available, so would have to repeatedly dub
the next sequencer track thru the next synth patch on to tape, until
death do you part...
Whew.... this isn't easy. Karl Moeller
|
253.13 | ground control to.. | CANYON::MOELLER | Swap 'til you Drop | Mon Jun 09 1986 20:13 | 9 |
| re -1.... was it something I said? Or didn't say? There are some
very valid sequencer questions back there... is it that there aren't
any Mac owners out there? The questions are more generic and conceptual
than specific to the Opcode sequencer software.
So come on, you sequencer owners! Check out 253.12 and tell me what
it's like !
karl moeller
|
253.14 | your circuit's dead, there's something wrong! | MENTOR::COTE | Bodacious Cowboys... | Mon Jun 09 1986 21:20 | 35 |
| OK, I'll give it a shot...
Your gonna be in deep wazoo if you ignore the metronome on your
sequencer. Sequencers don't dig randomness anymore than any other
computers do. STAY AWAY FROM *QUANTIZATION*!. This little feature
will take your free-form composition and force it to fit into the
sequencer's own idea of what's "right". You CAN use a sequencer
to record your composition, free-form or not. But since the sequencer
will see everything as recorded in measures of 3, 4, 5, 12 or whatever
beats per measure, you're gonna have a hard time "cutting and
pasteing". The best analogy I can think of is trying to use the
keypad editor on a vt1XX when you have placed spaces randomly about
your text. Where does one word start? Where does this word end?
I hope you get the picture.
Assuming you get by that and have cut and pasted your way into
compostional heaven, adding new MIDI sequencer tracks shouldn't
be a problem. These too, will have to be played just as freely
as your piano track though with respect to the sequencer metronome.
They will however have to be EXACTLY in time with your piano track.
With respect to C&P'ing. With your freeform comps, you can still
cut and paste, but you're gonna have to pay a LOT of attention to
the end of the sequence you intend to append to in order to have
it segue nice and clean into the pasted part. It is possible to
have 2 or more piano tracks running, with the subsequent parts
adding passing tones for a smooth transition.
Finding a sequencer/software that will quantize to minute parts
(128th, 256th? 512th?!?!) of a measure will help. If you want to
work with a sequencer you gotta talk it's language.
Edd
|
253.15 | MIDI EVENTING | MINDER::KENT | | Tue Jun 10 1986 04:55 | 11 |
| Re. -2 the only thing I would add to -1 is the ability to edit MIDI
events. I have seen a guy using some software from a company called
C-LAB? that allowed you to peek and poke every event in the sequence
this allowed you to edit in patch changes and velocity info etc.
He seemed to be making good use of this feature.
PAUL.
I was thinking of having my whole life quantised
so I would start and leave work on time (good family feature).
|
253.16 | Can you hear me, Major Moeller? | MENTOR::COTE | Bodacious Cowboys... | Tue Jun 10 1986 09:23 | 20 |
| I thought a bit more. I don't know if this is inherent to all
sequencers, but here's how it works on my QX7...
Consider the following scenario...Suppose you start a measure with
a "note on" message (this could come anywhere in the measure) and
hold it until beat 2 of the following measure. On b3m2 you hit
another note and hold that until the end of m3. If you now try to
insert a phrase between m1 & m2, the first note you hit will sound
right through the inserted phrase because no "note off" was recieved.
It will continue to sound until b2m3 where the note off message
lives. You can easily see how this is gonna raise havoc. Some
sequencers may have the facility to insert "note on" or "note off"s
at will. Mine don't. The QX7 does not allow you to start a measure
with anything but a note or a rest. You can't start it with a
"continue". (Continue what?) You also can't cut a measure that begins
with a tie and paste it somewhere else. Just doesn't work.
Edd
|
253.18 | Two different issues here. | DAIRY::SHARP | Oh no! Not another Don Sharp clone! | Tue Jun 10 1986 12:08 | 15 |
| What Kapitan Karl is asking for is damn near impossible, what Major Tom is
asking for is merely difficult. (My opinion, open for discussion.)
What Karl wants is something like a natural language analyzer coupled with a
voice recognition system. He wants to be able to recite a poem and have the
system not only remember the sounds, but break it down into the primitive
language units so that it can be easily massaged in interesting ways later.
What Tom wants (although maybe he wants more than he's asking for) is
something like DECtalk combined with something like WPS-PLUS. He wants
a system in which one can notate everything that's syntactically legal, and
a semantic translator that can accurately realize what that notation is
supposed to represent.
Don.
|
253.20 | Stockhausen on a chip | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Tue Jun 10 1986 13:21 | 46 |
|
It's still too early to give a review of Performer (Mark of
the Unicorn's sequencer package for the Mac), but one big drawback
is that "at the current time" you cannot have more than one meter
in a piece.
That's, of course, terrible. I had this limitation with my Chroma
setup and got around it by setting the meter to the lowest common
denominator (1/16, 1/32, etc.). This may work with Performer too.
After you get the piece to sound like you want, you can dump it
to the notation editor and add meter-changes to your heart's content.
If the granularity is small enough, 'recording' freeform rhythms
is no problem at all. Performer deals in terms of ticks (480th
of a beat). At fast tempos, this is sufficient.
The real problem comes when trying to print out your piece in
music notation. You MUST quantitize or even the simplest rhythms
will come out looking like Elliot Carter (if they come out at all).
Performer seems to be quite flexible in this area, offering
a range of note values to quantitize to (including dotted notes
and all manner of 'tuplets') and sensitivity setting (which I haven't
tried yet).
I think the problem with a lot of the sequencer/notation software
is with the programmers. They are usually pretty simple minded
about music. I think this will change as 'desk-top music publishing'
comes of age, and the demand for packages capable of handling the
full range of traditional notation grows. Music typesetting/engraving
is *expensive* (especially for complex pieces) - the market is there.
Right now, it's a trade-off. I can't do meter or tempo changes.
But, I can cut and paste sections, transpose, invert, retrograde,
etc. Lotsa power. And, if I do get the piece to sound great, and
get a rough approximation in notation, I can always do the final
copy in pen and ink and make it perfect.
,Karl Malik (not Moeller)
p.s. Had fun last night. Played random pitches/rhythms all over
the keyboard, 6 tracks deep. Quantitized to 32nd notes, printed
it out in 4/4. The result looked like some very serious, intellectual
score you might see in Perspectives of New Music. And even more
impressive is that I can play it - I mean, I've got the recording
to prove it! :-)
|
253.21 | Dream ON | CANYON::MOELLER | Swap 'til you Drop | Tue Jun 10 1986 13:49 | 27 |
| Well ! thank you all. I recently heard (at L.A. success train) the
term 'granularity' used in reference to a specific network device.
At the time I dismissed it as a Young Yuppieism (like, totally
granular!).
The reason for all the questions in .12 is that it would be nice
to be able to just improvise a digital piano track into the sequencer,
WITHOUT METRONOME, in varying tempos/time signatures, and then 'Word
Process' the musical ideas into a finished composition. And then,
of course, layer additional MIDI tracks into the sequencer.
Okay. I see the deal. How about this scenario: unnamed pianist tapes
a perfect 1/2 hour improvisation in stereo on a multitrack. After
listening, this pianist decides to orchestrate said piece. He stripes
an unused tapetrack with FSK or SMPTE or SMPL or some damn thing.
He wires up his Mac-based Generic Sequencer to slave to the sync
tone. Now, no segment editing to do (because the original taped
piano tracks are PERFECT), actually only punchin/out to do. Multiple
tracks of sample patches... which are transferred to the multitrack
one sequencer track at a time, because there's only ONE sample synth
available for audio.
Any hitches to this scenario ?
thanks. karl moeller (not malik)
|
253.22 | You CAN DO IT! | MENTOR::COTE | High in The Custerdome... | Tue Jun 10 1986 13:56 | 4 |
|
Yeah, that's the ticket!
Edd
|
253.23 | WE Can Do It! | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Tue Jun 10 1986 16:24 | 17 |
| I've stayed out of this so far because my dedicated sequencers (MSQ-100
and MSQ-700) seemed to not be what Karl was talking about, and there's
no Amiga sequencing software worth talking about yet (I'm waiting
for the Mimetics SoundScape stuff which is promised "real soon now").
However, much of this discussion reads like the "requirements spec"
I am working up for the Amiga based sequencer I'm going to implement
one of these days. Is it worth typing up my ideas and starting
a new note on "Requirements for Computer Based Sequencers"? We've
got a lot of computer and musical knowledge hanging around the net
here, I'll bet we could spec a really keen system; then we could
start thinking about multiple implementations for all our different
PCs, and the file formats would all be compatible so we could swap
data etc...
len.
|
253.24 | MIDIMac sequencer land | CANYON::MOELLER | Change your PERSONAL_NAME daily | Wed Jul 09 1986 13:33 | 37 |
| Remember this note? When last we met here, I was asking plaintively
whether I would be able to record 'solo piano' pieces into a sequencer
(specifically Opcode MIDIMac) without using the metronome.
Well, I've got it and it works. I can even EDIT chunks of data since
the edit block goes to the BAR / BEAT / SUB level. 'SUB' is a portion
of a beat! So if I need to punch in at a particular spot, for either
part replacement or trimming dead space off the end of a sequence,
I just let it play to the spot I want, punch STOP or PAUSE. The
display shows where we are down to BAR/BEAT. However, if I SET the
punchin spot, it AUTOMATICALLY copies the current location into
the punchin address. I let it play and again STOP or PAUSE at the
punchout point, then SET automatically copies the current location,
down to the SUB level, into the punchout address. At the end of
a sequence there's always dead space since I can't reach the mouse
fast enough. There, I just specify punchIN one beat after the last
note, and specify NO punchout address. It works, and I NEVER HEAR
THE METRONOME.
One thing that bothers me, though. I recorded 2 sequences totalling
no more than 7 minutes of music, and it took over 60K to save it
on floppy! I'm moving into longer pieces, and was hoping to use
the Mac and sequencer to help me assemble them.
When I recorded these, I left the SPEED on the 120bpm default setting.
Tonight I will experiment with the SPEED setting. My experiment:
using a separate metronome, I will record the same progression with
the internal speed set at various points. And then compare the size
of the saved sequences. I HOPE that storage requirements will go down
as the speed decreases, as there are fewer BAR / BEAT divisions... are
these part of the sequence ? Is this a valid approach to condensing
the sequence sizes ?
If I can't do this, then there's a 2meg memory and hard disk in
my immediate future... unplanned expenses.
karl moeller
|
253.25 | And His Hands Never Leave His Arms... | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jul 09 1986 14:34 | 22 |
| The internal representation of a sequence should be independent
of tempo - otherwise you (sorry, the sequencer)'d have to do too
real time processing to map from the recorded tempo to the performed
tempo. I believe time within the internal representation is
represented relative to the MIDI clock or some subdivision thereof
(i.e., it's beat based). The bar lines, beat counts, whatever they
are, get stored regardless of the tempo. The storage requirements
are less a function of elapsed time than of number of events (NOTE
ONs, NOTE OFFs, program changes, bends, aftertouch, etc.). So,
I'd not expect you to see any storage savings. Consider - an MC500
gets about 40000 notes on an 880K DSDD 3.5" disk; that's 22 bytes
per note effectively, a lot more than the 4 bytes that actually
get sent. That's the sort of overhead that seems inevitable.
For reasonably complicated stuff, notes get used up fast; my "cover"
of the 6th Brandenburg's first movement (6 parts, mostly 16ths in
4 of them, mostly 1/8ths in 2 of them) wiped out the 6000 note capacity
of my MSQ-100 in 51 bars. Unfortunately the 1st movement is quite
a bit longer.
len.
|
253.26 | | JUNIOR::DREHER | My first personal name... | Wed Jul 09 1986 15:36 | 3 |
| Len, your MC-500 is still not in yet? Who'd you order it from?
DD
|
253.27 | I'm Getting Used to Waiting | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Jul 09 1986 15:49 | 12 |
| Roland of course! ;^)
E U Wurlitzer in Framingham. They had them but they went to
people who were in line ahead of me. Now they're backordered.
I already have a deposit on one so I can't go elsewhere. Mine was
promised to me two weeks ago but Roland hasn't come through with
the followup shipment yet. I gather a fair number of them were
taken by the Boston store. Internal store politics. I had to pay
the rent last week anyway.
len.
|
253.28 | Tale of a Poor Purchase | CANYON::MOELLER | Change your PERSONAL_NAME daily | Thu Jul 10 1986 13:31 | 52 |
| Last night I did some experiments with the Mac.
I didn't like the results. The Mac is gone.
Experiment A: Recorded the same 8-bar piece four times, at the same
playing tempo. Used the INTERNAL METRONOME for these.. no
rule-breaking.
a1 : 120 bpm 8 bars ............ 7064 bytes on disk
a2 : 60 bpm 4 bars ............ 7724 bytes
a3 : 240 bpm 16 bars ............ 7712 bytes
a4 : 360 bpm 24 bars ............ 7184 bytes
What could be happening ? 7-8Kbytes for 8 measures of slow chords ?????
Experiment B: continued the previous night's sequence building,
but used the internal metronome. Added two more short sequences.
Saved them to disk, and saw that this named file was up to 96K.
Got back in, played them end-to-end and timed them. They added up
to 2Min 45Sec... solo piano playing.
Let's see... 96Kbytes = 2.75 minutes. 96K to 468K is approx. a factor
of 5... so 5 X 2.75 minutes = approx. 13 minutes of solo piano
recording before I'm out of memory and disk. This is with NO additional
tracks or 'overdubs'. Totally unacceptable.
Perhaps the KX88 is flooding the sequences with (useless for the
Roland MKS-20 Digital Piano) aftertouch information. I DO use the
pedal a lot, but that shouldn't be it. I hear that the DX-7 sends
some kind of 'here I am' MIDI signal ever 25 uSec... wonder if the
KX88 has the same emissions level. There's certainly no pitchbend
or LFO controller info going on. There might be a MIDIweeder program
writable or purchasable, but it implies that I know precisely what
to remove.. and what to leave..meaning I'd have to learn the internals
of these sequencer tracks as well as the original authors.
So my error was thinking that a 1-hour recording session 3 months
ago was a good demo... in fact I played quite differently, used
'looping' on two tracks, etc... wrong from the get-go..
CONCLUSION: I broke every evaluation/configuration rule that I know
for corporate computer purchases. And, indeed, given that the pieces
I am working on are longer than they used to be (my requirements
are themselves a moving target), I conclude that the Mac in its
current memory/disk configuration is not useful to me. It is indeed
possible to get more memory and either hard disk or double-sided
floppy drives, but any money put into the Mac is money not available
for the still completely-necessary (because I'll only have two MIDI
modules, the 'piano' and sampler) 8 track recorder.
karl moeller
|
253.29 | speed versus space | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Jul 10 1986 15:08 | 20 |
| re: .28--I'm not sure why the music is taking so much space, but I can
guess. I optimized my sequencer's internal representation for space
rather than speed. As a result a note normally takes only 4 bytes, if
you are using just one instrument and no modulation wheel, pitch
bending or release velocity. Unfortunately that makes all processing
except record and playback very also if you have a lot of notes in
memory, because you have to do a lot of sequential searches. I put in
a pointer cache to make displaying faster, but it still isn't fast
enough for me. I speculate that the MAC uses an internal format that
lets it perform operations quickly, and that they therefore need more
than 4 bytes per note.
My solution to this problem (I have it too, even with only 4 bytes per
note, since I am running from an Apple IIe) is to divide the music into
sections, and have a sequencer file for each. When you have all the
sections perfected, lay them onto tape, using SMPTE to get the timing
right. You will only be able to do this if your MIDI sequencer can
accept the MIDI Start and Clock messages from the MIDI In port while
playing on MIDI OUT.
John Sauter
|
253.30 | | CANYON::MOELLER | Change your PERSONAL_NAME daily | Thu Jul 10 1986 15:36 | 6 |
| re -1: shorter sequences/SMPTE lock... I know that it's possible
to do this, but I don't want to partition my pieces in this manner.
The bytes per note issue is intriguing.. obviously TONS of disk
overhead going on.
karl
|
253.31 | Also, what's hooked to what? | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Thu Jul 10 1986 15:37 | 16 |
| Karl,
I've noticed that my kx88/Performer setup does (as you wondered)
put out a ton of after-touch info. I haven't figured out how to
filter this out, yet.
Why dump the Mac without trying different software?
I'll try an 8-bar series of chords and let you know how much
memory/disk space Performer uses.
Suggestion: Call OpCode directly and speak with one of their
technicians.
- Karl
|
253.32 | It's All Unplugged, Anyway | CANYON::MOELLER | Change your PERSONAL_NAME daily | Thu Jul 10 1986 15:57 | 19 |
| Karl,
You're right, I was hasty. And hot. The more I worked with it
the less right it felt. And, possibly fallacious assumption, it's
unlikely that competitive Mac-resident sequencer software would
be 3 to 4 times more memory/disk efficient than Opcode MIDIMac.
And a factor of 3 or 4 is what I would need. My next recording
project looks like a 20 - 30 (!) minute piano solo (carefully planned)
which is then overdubbed with 4 - 7 separate tracks meant for the
as-yet-unpurchased sampler. More money (and time) spent trying to
force the Mac into my needs sounds (sounded) like spitting into
the ocean (pissing into the wind?). Money & time better spent on
sampler and 8track purchase and research.
Anyway, it's academic now, the Mac's well on its way back where
it came from.
Karl
|
253.33 | Too much MIDI | NIMBUS::DAVIS | | Fri Jul 11 1986 09:48 | 12 |
| RE: .28
The Passport software I had for my C64 allowed you to set it so
that aftertouch and "active sensing" (what you refer to as the
'here I am' MIDI signal) could be filtered out and ignored by the
recorder. They claimed in the manual that this would save mucho
memory when recording. Sounds like you may want to check for this
kind of feature in a sequencer if you plan to be recording long
pieces that don't require the extra MIDI data.
Rob
|
253.34 | input filtering saves memory | STAR::MALIK | Karl Malik | Fri Jul 11 1986 14:37 | 20 |
|
I tried a couple of experiments on my Performer software last
night.
1) Not having a good intuitive sense of just how much of a limit
66,000 notes is (that's the limit of my sequencer), I just started
recording and playing (and watching a stopwatch and the memory).
Played lotsa notes, big chords, trills, etc. Got just about
12 minutes before memory filled up. (also, get this - instead of
announcing that memory was full, the system just crashed!)
Later I got out the manual and found out that I *can* filter
out certain info during recording. I set the filter to eliminate
aftertouch info and retried the experiment.
Results - Got up to 18 minutes of lotsa notes, with lotsa
memory still free, when the doorbell rang. Will retry this tonight.
,km1
|
253.35 | The Fool on Windham Hill | CANYON::MOELLER | Pins in my Software dolls | Mon Jul 21 1986 14:02 | 31 |
| When last we met, there was a deep moan regarding the capacity of
the Fat Mac as sequencer.
Well, the results are in, and once again I'm the fool. I was hotheaded,
hasty, and sloppy in my problem evaluation. I keep thinking of the
KX88 as a KEYBOARD instead of the computer it is. As a realtime
programmer, 'C' and Assembler, I have no excuse for not diving into
the MIDI implementation chart. After all, it's only ASCII with control
bytes!
My West Coast Tech Resource took my sequences, 2.75 minutes/96Kbytes,
and 'rerecorded' them (played them THRU his) with a DX7, and found
that my 96K sequence shrunk to.... 16K. muy embarrasso...
My East Coast Tech Resource took a 41K sequence, and, after merely
shutting off the KX88 Aftertouch, shrunk it to..... 14K.
Well, it ain't the first time, and it won't be the last. Glad I
didn't sell the Mac in haste. It seems the KX88 is designed to send
all kinds of MIDI data to all kinds of MIDI devices simultaneously.
If not set up properly for the recording, the illfated sequencer
is faced with recording every last bit sent, regardless of relevance.
This DOES imply some preplanning. A sampled violin sequence would
definitely require aftertouch, while a sequence track destined to
play thru the MKS-20 Digital Piano definitely does NOT require after-
touch.
karl moeller the unwise
karl moeller
|