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Conference napalm::commusic_v1

Title:* * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * *
Notice:Conference has been write-locked. Use new version.
Moderator:DYPSS1::SCHAFER
Created:Thu Feb 20 1986
Last Modified:Mon Aug 29 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2852
Total number of notes:33157

392.0. "Activision MUSIC STUDIO on Amiga" by ERLANG::FEHSKENS () Fri Jun 13 1986 11:49

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Note 56.1                Summary of ABUG's May meeting                    1 of 1
ERLANG::FEHSKENS                                     32 lines   9-JUN-1986 12:02
                 -< A Musician's Thumbs Down on Music Studio >-
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    I've used MUSIC STUDIO on the Amiga, and I consider it an abomination.
    It has numerous problems that make it useless to me for compositional
    purposes.  The most glaring are its subtle misuse of conventional
    music notation that make its "scores" almost unreadable.  It will
    only display two staves at a time, and it places sharps and flats
    3 semitones above the note they belong on.  It duplicates the flags
    on the notes of a chord, so a chord of three eighth notes ends up
    looking like a chord of 3 32nd notes.  This is impossible to
    disambiguate, because unlike a real score, it spaces notes uniformly
    rather than based on time value.  It uses the bar line to delineate
    phrases rather than bars, so you can't use bar numbers (it uses
    note number, again without regard for time values) to locate anything.
    It notates triplets by putting a subscript 3 alongside the note,
    increasing the unreadability, instead of using a super 3 over a
    tie a la conventional notation.  It cannot handle quintuplets. 
    Its tempo range is inadequate for performance purposes.  Its
    interactive style is an impediment; e.g. if you want to sharp or
    flat a note, you have to select the sharp or flat "mode"; you can't
    just stick a sharp or flat in front of a note.  You have to access
    a menu for damn near every note you write.  It doesn't do any beaming,
    and the multicolored notes (one color for each instrument) are
    meaningless and some of the colors are very difficult to see.
    
    It does work, and the Amiga implementation had no bugs that I ran
    into.  The user interface may be appropriate for the musically naive,
    but anybody with any sightreading skills will be driven to distraction
    by it.
    
    Sorry to be such a downer, but MUSIC STUDIO was a disaster for me.
    
    len.
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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392.2Maybe it's the nature of the beast...MENTOR::COTEA race of men in the trees...Fri Jun 13 1986 13:3411
    Are there ANY software programs which do a good job of printing
    scores? This is the second one I've heard of which does off-the-
    wall crap.
    
    The other one (MusicWorks is the name I think, runs on a Mac) also
    does weird stuff; rests only show up in the G clef, regardless of
    which staff they belong in; notes on top of one another; ect.
    
    Totally useless.
    
    Edd
392.3Yes, but it costs...STAR::MALIKKarl MalikFri Jun 13 1986 13:4818
    
    	Professional Composer by Mark of the Unicorn (in Boston) does
    a good job.  Lists for $400+ but can be had by mail order for around
    $200+.
    
    	It *does* have irritating limitations, but is far better than
    any of its competitors.
    
    	The only runner-up is a product (whose name I've forgotten)
    out of Canada, which was written up in a past MIT Computer Music
    Journal.  No play-back ability.  And, I think, no error checking.
    Just a flexible graphics package with lotsa music symbols. This
    one is cheap ($49 rings a bell).  Something like MusEd.
    
    						- Karl
    
    p.s. Professional Composer files printed on a laser printer are
    quite impressive.
392.4errataSTAR::MALIKKarl MalikFri Jun 13 1986 13:5010
    
    	Re;-1
    
    	I should have made it clear that Professional Composer and the
    other product mentioned are for the Mac, not the Amiga.
    
    	I was responding to the previous general question about whether
    there was *anything* that did a good job at notation.
    
    								- Karl
392.5Welcome to Fantasy IslandSTAR::BRANDENBERGCivilization is the progress toward a society of privacy.Fri Jun 13 1986 15:458
    
    I've been (lightly) interested in writing a score editor for some
    time.  What I need ( other than more motivation ) is a complete
    reference on notation including historical variations ( vaporware
    can do EVERYTHING ).  Also some ideas on interfaces.  Anyone want
    to make recommendations?
    
    					Monty
392.6a non-trivial projectSTAR::MALIKKarl MalikFri Jun 13 1986 16:2016
    
    	The book Tom mentioned is very good.  Also, check out Gardner
    Read's 'Notation' (or 'Music Notation').
    
    	One of the big problems with writing notation programs is that
    music notation is far from being concise, logical, predictable,
    etc.  If you don't take the inconsistancies of the language into
    account in your original design, you'll regret it later.
    
	Also, I'd suggest going to a library and taking out an armload
    of scores.  Baroque, classical, romantic, modern, avant-garde, folk,
    jazz, rock, etc. Solos, chamber ensemble, keyboard, choir, orchestral,
    percussion, etc.  And, really look at them before deciding a priori
    what people do and don't do.
    
    								- Karl
392.7ERLANG::FEHSKENSFri Jun 13 1986 16:2421
    The reference Tom supplied in .1 is probably a good place to start.
    I'm going to try to find a copy for myself (Tom, can you be of any
    help in this regard?).  And Tom's right about "real" musical scores
    and the relationship between time values and horizontal position;
    in my ire at Activision I oversimplified.  If you saw what the Music
    Studio does you'd understand.  Basically every note, regardless
    of time value, is the same distance apart.  It  does have lots of
    "cute" features, and the user interface is halfway intelligible
    without any documentation, but my original assesment still stands.
    
    It's currently the ONLY piece of music software available on the
    Amiga;  I'm still waiting for the Mimetics Soundscape stuff promised
    me two months ago.  When I get it, you'll hear about it.
    
    My offer still stands to organize my notes about requirements for
    a composition system.  I've only gotten one piece of mail encouraging
    me to do this; absent that, it's a very "backburner" project for
    me until I give up on Mimetics.
    
    len.
    
392.8A Halfbaked IdeaERLANG::FEHSKENSFri Jun 13 1986 16:3530
    re .6 - Monty, one thing I learned from screwing around with the
    MUSIC STUDIO was that any composition system has got to be as easy
    to use as a pencil and music paper.  What that meant to me was that
    placing a note ought to be doable something like the following:
    
    Move the cursor (with the mouse) to the place where you want the
    note's head to be.  Click the mouse to drop an open head there; click
    it again (within some time window) to fill the head.  Move the mouse
    up or down to orient the stem.  Click the mouse as many times as
    you want flags on the stem.  Problems - time windows/timeouts, whole
    notes.  Beaming - what you'd like to do is sweep the mouse/cursor
    over a sequence of notes that you want to beam together, and flag
    them all at the same time.  I haven't figured out how to do this
    yet.  Maybe a pen/tablet interface would be more appropriate, but
    they're hard to find on for the current crop of PCs.
    
    Noters who write music on paper with pencil - do you do as I do
    and write lots of notes head only and then go back and add the stems
    and flags; rather than writing complete notes one at a time?  I
    think understanding usage patterns like this is the key to a usable
    and efficient user interface.
    
    Anybody else have any thoughts?
    
    This is a small fraction of the sort of stuff I have in my requirements
    notebook.
    
    len.
    
    
392.9Oops.ERLANG::FEHSKENSFri Jun 13 1986 16:384
    .8 is re .5, not .6
    
    len.
    
392.10$ EDIT/MUSICSTAR::BRANDENBERGCivilization is the progress toward a society of privacy.Fri Jun 13 1986 16:5314
    
    re: .8	Your notebook sounds like it might be of interest. 
    		Perhaps a photocopy could be arranged?  As you say,
    	a backburner project until all else fails and in my case, because
    	my design would likely be more ambitious than any one of the
    	current micro systems:  interchange between different hardware
    	systems, personalization of editing characteristics, etc.
    
    re: .1	The author of the text is Ross?

    	It may never be done but I am interested in ideas....
    
    					Monty
    
392.12More, As If It Were NecessaryERLANG::FEHSKENSMon Jun 16 1986 11:4246
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Note 48.1                   Activision MUSIC STUDIO                       1 of 2
ALIBUT::SANTIAGO "Ed Santiago"                       21 lines  16-JUN-1986 10:00
                    -< Another Thumbs Down on Music Studio >-
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    Have to agree with you. I bought Music Studio two weeks ago and
    it really is pretty useless. To add to your list of complaints,
    the predefined instruments are poor, having to load sound libraries
    instead of individual instruments is very inflexible, and its
    restriction that ties can only be placed between notes of the same
    pitch is ridiculous! Also, you can't change key in the middle of
    a piece, the time signature is worthless since bars are not fixed
    length and therefore never know where the beat will fall, and it
    has no dynamics (you select a volume for the song. It plays the
    entire song at that volume). I regret having spent all that money.
    
    On the other hand, MusiCraft looks more reasonable, albeit more
    expensive. General Computer (Rte 9, Framingham) has a demo copy
    and it looks like they got their act together a bit better than
    Activision. Unfortunately MusiCraft is in the >$100 range, out
    of reach for a lowlife student such as me. If somebody buys this,
    though, please post your reaction to it, I'd like to know.
    
    Incidentally, I am not a musician, and have no musical talent
    whatsoever.
    
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Note 48.2                   Activision MUSIC STUDIO                       2 of 2
ERLANG::FEHSKENS                                     11 lines  16-JUN-1986 10:10
                              -< Well, yeah, but >-
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    To be fair, the problem with ties across notes of different pitch
    (I think this is properly called a slur, no pejorative intended)
    to denote legato playing is achieved with the Music Studio by using
    the bar lines to delimit a phrase that should be played legato.
    So you can get the effect, you just have to do it using unconventional
    notation.
    
    Not that this makes the thing any more attractive.
    
    len.
    
392.13a nitSTAR::MALIKKarl MalikMon Jun 16 1986 11:588
    re; 12 & 11
    
    	Yup, it's a slur or a phrase mark.
    
    	By the way, can it change tempi during the piece?  So far, I
    haven't found any software (for any hardware) that can do this.
    
    							- Karl
392.14Even if it could you don't want itERLANG::FEHSKENSMon Jun 16 1986 15:2616
    No it can't; and the temp range it does provide is inadequate. 
    (Slowest tempo is about 56 bpm;  I don't recall the fastest.
    
    The new Roland MC500 will record (and execute) tempo changes.
    I thought I had read someplace about some sequencer software that
    will handle tempo changes, but I don't recall where.  I'll check
    into this.  Note that the MSQ-100 and MSQ-700 won't even memorize
    1 tempo for the entire piece.
    
    Now what I'd really like to be able to do is store all of this stuff,
    include patch parameter values, as part of a single (logical) file.
    No more of this trying to find everything scattered across a half
    dozen data tapes to get back to where you were last session.
    
    len.
    
392.15Variable Tempo SequencersERLANG::FEHSKENSTue Jun 17 1986 11:5338
    I extracted the following data from Keyboard's foldout summary of
    sequencers;  these sequencers purport to support what Keyboard
    calls "tempo rubato", which they define as "one that varies gradually".
    This is not exactly correct; tempo rubato actually means an ebb
    and flow of tempo within a phrase (the phrase is Italian for "robbed
    time" and implies that a little rushing at the beginning is made
    up for by a little dawdling at the end, or vice versa).  Also rubato
    is usually applied to a phrase within a voice, not to all voices
    simultaneously or exactly the same way.  Hence I take a check in
    the rubato column to mean only "programmably variable tempo" and
    NOT actual rubato.  Thus warned, here we go:
    
    For Apple IIe - CTM Mixmaster
    
    For APPLE IIe and Commodore 64 - Dr. T's Keyboard Control Sequencer
    				     Passport Master Tracks
    				     Syntech Studio 1,2
    
    For Commodore 64 - Beam Team MIDI Composer MM1, MM2
    		       Joreth Music Composer System
    		       Syntech Music Studio
    
    For IBM PC - Octave Plateau Sequencer Plus
    		 Syntech IBM 48 Track Sequencer
    		 System Design Associates ProMIDI
    
    For Apple Mac - Creative Solutions Studio Mac
    		    CTM Configure Rhythm Software
    		    Musicworks Megatrack
    		    OpCode MIDIMac Sequencer
    		    Southworth Total Music
    
    For Atari 130XE - Hybrid Arts MIDI Track III
    
    Dedicated hardware sequencers - Casio SZ-1
    				    Roland MC500
    				    Yamaha QX1, QX7
    
392.16Info whose got the info?ALAGSH::BOTTOM_DAVIDTue Jun 17 1986 12:116
    Len, do you have an address for info on the beam team midi composer?
    I would be ineterested in looking over the info so I can choose
    one for my C64....if I ever find an interface I like.....and can
    afford....
    
    dave
392.17I does but not here...ERLANG::FEHSKENSTue Jun 17 1986 12:318
    It's in the Keyboard MIDI issue (the one with all the MIDI connectors
    on the cover) or the "Synth '86" special (a combination of the MIDI
    issue and the "Programming" issue - so it's got both the connectors
    and the "synth pallette" on the cover).  I'll get the address for
    Beam Team and post it tomorrow.
    
    len.
    
392.18Beam Team AddressERLANG::FEHSKENSWed Jun 18 1986 10:286
    Beam Team
    877 53rd St.
    Oakland CA 94608
    
    (415) 652-3208
    
392.19ALAGSH::BOTTOM_DAVIDWed Jun 18 1986 11:483
    Thanks Len, I'll be contacting them for the info.
    
    dave
392.20Wrong number!ALAGSH::BOTTOM_DAVIDWed Jun 18 1986 12:095
re:.18 This phone number is NOT good. Keyboard misprinted apparrently.
    I talked the the guy at that number and he is a synthesizer player
    but he is NOT bean team.......
    
    dave
392.21SorryERLANG::FEHSKENSWed Jun 18 1986 12:425
    Oops - did you try California information?  Did I type it in correctly?
    Here it is again, just in case - (415) 652-3208.
    
    len (who's only as good as his sources)
    
392.22RANGLY::BOTTOM_DAVIDThu Jun 19 1986 11:548
    Len I didn't try information I sent a letter instead. The guy at
    the number (you did type in in right) said that he was receiving
    15 calls an hour for the last week or so, and he'd only just gotten
    the phone a few weeks before. He was contacting Keyboard to get
    a retraction/correction printed so his phone load will be reduced.
    Seemed like a cheerful sort though......
    
    dave