T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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461.1 | Welcome to the club... | JAWS::COTE | Sounds like a dry martini... | Thu Aug 07 1986 09:25 | 19 |
| Yep, I have NO MIDI-thru. The JX I'm using is a very early production
model (ser. no. XX000055, I think). While the upgrade solved my
OMNI-OFF problem, it's no utopia. I now have velocity sensitive
EVERYTHING. Organ has to be the wierdest...
I've solved (got around) the problem by always using my DX as a
controller. When the upgrade is activated, the JX is essentially
a rack-mount box, as the keyboard is disconnected. The Mirage
with it's velo-send just sucks up to much sequencer memory.
I think you may run into problems playing scles off of the drum
machine. Most of the machines I've seen couple one drum voice to
one, and only one, key on the keyboard. Now if you're lucky, you'll
have all the right notes. Murphy's MIDI law will naturally take
precedence at this point...
Edd
P.S. My JX owners manual devotes 1 PARAGRAPH to MIDI....
|
461.2 | 707 as a MIDI master | RSTS32::DBMILLER | Cecil B. D'Miller | Thu Aug 07 1986 11:27 | 33 |
| > Can you assign the keys to the drum voices in a way so that say
> the scale of A minor is assigned to the keys in some order and then
> program the 707 toplay the scale? can I somehow either defeat the
> note off (I'm assuming that's why the notes were so short) or lengthen
> the note on? Or something? maybe adjust the decay on the JX?
You can assign different keys for INPUT only. For output, you are
forced to accept one of the two pre-programmed key configurations.
The second one, I beleive, is the one that covers 15 consecutive notes.
You can't defeat the note-offs. They come automatically, and each
note will last for a sixteenth note. You can't lengthen it either.
Try having a long release time set on your patch. All notes will
still end up the same length, but you determine how hong that is
by how long it takes for the patch to decay.
> Does the accent on the 707 give different values of velocity? ie
> by programming in an accent does the midi velocity info change?
Yes. I believe the numbers are something like no accent = 64, weak
accent = 80, and heavy accent = 96.
> I also could not get the 707 to select the second pre-programmed
> key configuration (pg. 46 7070 manual figure d-2) is there a mistake
> in the book that anyone is aware of?
I've done it before. There didn't seem to be any trick to it. Just
make sure the machine isn't running, and that your in the correct mode
(Track play?) to switch configurations.
Hope this helps,
-Dave
|
461.3 | well I think I did it right.... | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Thu Aug 07 1986 12:10 | 14 |
| Hmm Edd, how do you get the JX into the "velocity sensitive" mode?
I go the 1 paragraph also, probably the same manual.
As far as key cofiguration 2 goes, I tried it in Track play, press
and hold shift, press midi channel press last step. No change. Is
this right? That's what the book says. Oh god maybe I need repair......
I'll try adjusting the decay tonight if I get a chance.
I'd like to program the keys and try sequencing. But it probably
won't work. Oh well, poor man's sequencer. I know I'll change keys
on the JX and who cares....:-)
dave
|
461.4 | Gate Time = Step Length | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Thu Aug 07 1986 12:45 | 14 |
| re .2 - the note length (sometimes called "gate time", corresponding
to how long a key is held down) corresponds to the step length,
so it will be 16th notes only for the scale (707 term) corresponding
to 16th note steps. If you set the scale to eighth note triplets,
your notes will be an eighth note triplet's worth long. If you
set the scale to 32nd notes, your notes will be 32nds. Etc..
Given the difficulty of programming melodies (even in the "assign
drum voices to successive note numbers so you can play a scale"
mode) and the lack of ties, this feature (using the 707 as a generic
MIDI sequencer) is of limited use to me. Especially with a real
sequencer sitting right next to it.
len.
|
461.5 | I'm in the mode for... | JAWS::COTE | Sounds like a dry martini... | Thu Aug 07 1986 14:08 | 5 |
| You activate the upgrade (velo-recieve) by powering the unit up
while holding voice selector 7 down. All JX on-board sequencer lights
come on indicating it's 'in the mode'....
Edd
|
461.6 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Thu Aug 07 1986 15:07 | 5 |
| Thanks to all...I'll be experimenting some more to see what the
limits are......don't have the money for a real sequencer right
now.
dave
|
461.7 | A real syncing feeling | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Mon Aug 11 1986 07:07 | 18 |
| Well I fixed most of my problems with the 707, selecting the different
keyboard patterns.
Set out to do a simple experiment using sync-to-tape. I recorded
the sync pattern along with a drum pattern. Then placing the 707
in the MIDI output mode and selceting the proper sync mode, I was
trying to record a drony bass line in sync to the drums. It started
fine but after a few bars the sync glitched a little and the 707
jumped AHEAD for the tape, by the end of the pattern it was approx
three to four beats ahead. I tried a number of different record
and playback levels on the sync, the book says record it anywhere
from -10 to -3 db not very exact. Nothing seemed to change it and
the jump was not consistantly in the same place, as measured by
my fine eye and the tape counter on the deck.
So any ideas what's going wrong?
dave the syncless
|
461.8 | Try This? | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 11 1986 11:54 | 27 |
| Hmmm - I've synced my 707 to tape numerous times and never had any
trouble. The only thing I can suggest is to ignore the admonition
to keep levels at the -10 to -3 VU level and get as much signal
on tape as you can. It's hard to imagine how the 707 could get
ahead of the tape, usually tape sync fails by the tracking instrument's
dropping beats. Are you sure the 707 was listening to the tape
(I think "s" shows as the tempo)?
Also, you may find it helpful to first erase the existing sync track
(by recording silence over it) before you rerecord over it. This
will guarantee complete eradication of the old sync pulses. Go
for a 0 VU to +3 VU indication at record time. Note also that the
707 will not sync at high tempos (it can generate tempos up to about
260 bpm, but will only sync to tempos somewhat less than that).
Also when using tape sync, you should record the sync track BY ITSELF
with no audio (also you usually want to put the sync on an edge
track), and then record the audio by syncing it, even if the audio
is coming from the original source of the sync. This way any sync
tracking delays will be shared by all audio tracks, not just those
layed down after the sync track recording pass.
I have even run the sync from tape through a digital delay and had
excellent tracking. I think your levels were too low.
len.
|
461.9 | | BIGALO::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Mon Aug 11 1986 13:42 | 20 |
| Len,
Thanks I will try out your suggestions. I questioned the levels
when I read them, but assumed that signal distortion might cause
mistracking. I have been using channel one for the sync track but
have been recording the audio at the same time, so I'll try this
all out.
Definately i was running in the sync mode the display had a s and
some sort of funny looking E (missing the top horizontal bar).
Probably I just needed to spend more time with it, but I used up
three hours as it was and the wallpaper still needs to be scraped
(a little at a time).
What a weekend! my stereo cassette went down again, same problem,
my 3340 is down, won't record on the "right" channels. Gasp sigh.
back to the shop and another couple of weeks.....my syncing experiment
was an attempt to raise my spirits after everthing else failed.....
Oh well, maybe I should have stuck to the wallpaper :-)
dave
|
461.10 | The MIDI Boys' Adventure at the Tape Sync Hole | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Tue Aug 12 1986 11:50 | 104 |
| Well, one ought to practice what one preaches.
Lats night, Dave Dreher I got together to add a sync track to an
already-been-recorded 8 track tape. (The tape's by Karl Moeller;
he asked me to replace the drums. My original plan had been to
just play the whole new drum part onto two free tracks, using the
existing drum track as a click. Dave suggested that his SBX-10
could add a sync track so I could program the drums - a definite
feature, as the piece is about 16 minutes long and punching in to
fix glitches and getting all the crescendos and fills in the right
places would be tricky as the waxing and waning on the mixdown
was down in the mix and isn't on the master, so a lot of cues would
be missing. Got that?)
Anyway, Dave further proposed that we first lay down a click track
using the SBX-10 "tap" input - rather than write an FSK sync directly
from the tap input, we'd write the click which would be easier to
punch in to if we had to to fix glitches in my 16 minutes of continuous
quarter note tapping. Made sense - you can't punch in an FSK track.
Since the SBX-10 can sync to a quarter note click track, we could
restripe the tape with FSK after we had a good click down.
So, we figured it would be good to try this first so we didn't waste
16 minutes of tapping if something was screwed up.
So we set everything up and I tapped for a few minutes. We rewound
the tape, set up teh SBX-10 to listen to the click on tape, set
up my 707 to listen to the SBX-10's MIDI out, programmed up a
compatible pattern (a complaint about the 707 - you can only change
its clock source (sync mode) when in track play mode, but to get
a pattern to loop you have to be in pattern play mode; switching
back and forth between these modes all the time tries one's patience)
and started the tape. Well, the SBX-10 locked to the click, the
707 started running, but what we heard was bizarre. The 707 was
clearly tracking the tape, but in some totally off the wall way.
It sounded in sync, but out of sync, if you know what I mean.
So, simplify the pattern to just quarter notes (more mode switching,
enabling this, disabling that - it must have taken about 20 button
pushes to get everything ready to go again) and replay the tape.
Bizarre! Count it out - sure enough, it was quarter note triplets!
The 707 was playing 6 beats to the SBX-10's 4! What the hey is
going on here? Confirm it by changing the 707's "scale" (step size)
to 32nd note triplets, but with a pattern length of 16. Sure enough,
it locked up fine, except it seemed to drift just a little, like
the two rhythms were "beating" against one another. Stranger and
stranger! But they're both happy! No obvious problems. No dropped
beats, no lurching, all the lights flashing like they should...
Well, it was getting late, and I was getting ready to give up.
Dave says, "let's try it one more time." Len says, "OK, but I think
we need more click level on tape". So crank the levels up to just
short of lighting up the OVERLOAD indicator, push a jillion buttons
(in the right order, of course), and try again.
BINGO, it's a hit. Perfect sync all around.
On to phase two. Can we get a good FSK from the 707 onto the tape,
driving the 707 off the SBX-10 MIDI out? Oh no, the yoyos at Roland
designed the 707 so it won't emit FSK when it's a MIDI slave! Dumb!
Now what?
Dave conjectures that the MC-500 FSK (no FSK in the SBX-10) is
compatible with the 707's FSK. I mean, after all, they're both
Roland, right? Right, but that don't make no never mind to them
Roland guys, the MC-500's FSK is obviously improved. I was skeptical,
but we tried it anyway, and sure enough, they're not compatible.
Alright, now what? Well, I don't have an SBX-10 and Dave was reluctant
to loan it to me for any length of time (understandable, as he uses
this little gem extensively, and I'm reluctant to loan even
nonessential equipment), but my MSQ-700 will write FSK while listening
to MIDI, so all I had to do was drive the MSQ-700 off the SBX-10's
MIDI while the SBX-10 was listening to the click track so the MSQ-700
could write an FSK track. Got that?
So Dave agreed to loan me the SBX-10 overnight later this week.
All we had to do now was get 16 minutes of quarter note click down
on the tape.
So, reconfigure and off we go, tap tap tap for 16 minutes. The
SBX-10 has an interesting feature, whereby when you supply the clock
by tapping, it will compute the instantaneous tempo from the time
between quarter notes and display it to you, updating the display
every quarter note. Quite an interesting thing to watch. The tempo
for this piece appeared to be around 186 bpm, and my tapping was
usually within the range 182 to 190. Once in a while you'd see
a 200 or a 170, but I couldn't hear or feel anything to correlate
with these excursions, and they were only for one beat. Good thing
there was something to watch, otherwise I'd have been bored crazy
tapping for 16 minutes.
OK, stay tuned for the next exciting installment, wherein we write
an MSQ-700 FSK track, run that track's output through a digital
delay, start the drum part one bar early with a short bar and use
the delay to time align the drum audio with the rest of the tape's
audio to arbitrary precision.
But first this...
len.
|
461.11 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Wed Aug 13 1986 08:15 | 19 |
| Hmm, interesting....
Now check this out....
I tried a number of things to get my system up and syncing. First
I totally erased the tape. Then I recorded the sync track at max
input level. Then I synced the drum track to it, no problems. Then
I put the 707 in MIDI out to drive my JX synced it up and before
the pilot tone was gone the 707 was 5-7 steps into the track. Hmm.
that's not right. So I started over. Same thing. Hmm turn off the
dbx (oh no no noise reduction). The 707 syncs fine at the beginning
of the tape but finishes one beat ahead of the tape. Hmm. try it
again with a different level on the sync track. The 707 finishes
one beat ahead of the tape, always in the midi out mode. With the
dbx in, it finishes 3-7 beats ahead of the tape, always in the midi
out mode. Conclusion. MIDI out does not sync to tape as well as
roland thinks it does. Scratch one project.
dave the syncless
|
461.12 | Before You Give Up.... | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Aug 13 1986 10:55 | 49 |
| I don't know what's going on up there in Maine, but I've been doing
exactly what you're trying to do with no trouble.
First, DO NOT USE NOISE REDUCTION ON SYNC TRACKS. Do not record
with it, do not play back with it. It will work, most of the time,
but to be safe, don't do it. Same for data saves/restores.
Second - what is MIDI out mode? The 707 always emits MIDI. Your
707 should be in tape sync mode, i.e., the tempo display shows "S"
(for sync) and "t" for tape. When syncing off tape the 707 will
emit both MIDI and DIN clocks. If you put the 707 in MIDI sync
mode ("S" for sync "n" for MIDI (yes, "n", it's only a 7 segment
display)), the 707 will run off of whatever MIDI input it's getting,
and I don't know where that would be coming from. The one beat
difference suggests to me that the 707 was free running at almost
the same tempo that the FSK on tape corresponds to. Just tape speed
variability could account for that - I'll bet you didn't move the
tempo knob. When I'm having sync troubles I always crank the tempo
knob around to some outrageous value so it'll be obvious where the
tempo is coming from. In tape sync mode the tempo knob is ignored.
Note the asymmetry - the 707 *will* emit MIDI and DIN sync when
syncing to FSK; it will *not* emit FSK when syncing to DIN or MIDI.
Once more it goes like this:
707 is master clock - tempo display shows tempo; put in track
play mode. Route 707 tape out to tape edge track. Set 0 VU level
from pilot tone. Start tape in record mode, *no NR*. Get a few seconds
of pilot on tape, then start 707. When 707 stops, stop tape.
Rewind.
707 still in track play mode. Set sync mode to tape ("S t").
Route edge track output to 707 tape in. May want to do this through
something with a volume control. Start 707 - lights on 16 key line
will go out, and it will not run. Start tape; when tape gets past
pilot tone, 707 will start, and will emit MIDI clocks over MIDI out.
707 will stop when FSK stops. MIDI will stop when 707 stops.
Repeat as necessary for subsequent tracks.
I think your conclusion is premature. This works, I have done it
reliably several times. When it didn't work, I wasn't doing it
right.
len.
|
461.13 | | RANGLY::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Wed Aug 13 1986 11:28 | 19 |
| I'll try it again, but I was in Sync t, my 707 does not appear to
output MIDI when the audio is enabled, ie I can have MIDI out or
I can have audio not both. But I'll double check that tonight. Since
my 234 does not have individually selectable noise reduction for
each channel I'm thinking that sync to tape is not much use to me,
except for this project.
MIDI out mode:
press and hold shift key, press midi channel release press
instrument/glide and release, release shift. MIDI data now outputs
but no audio is output for the track slected in track play mode.
Probably I'm doing something wrong, but I do know if I don't select
the MIDI out the synth doesn't run.
Try try again.....
dave all confusynced
|
461.14 | A - HAAaaa! Now I understand... | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Wed Aug 13 1986 14:44 | 20 |
| MY 707 unquestionably outputs MIDI and audio at the same time.
Oh wait a second - do you want note ons or just clocks? If the
latter, you're golden; if the former, right, you can't do that.
Are you using the 707 as a sequencer? I've been assuming you just
wanted clocks to sync up another sequencer with it. I'm not even
sure the 707 *can* sync to tape and output note ons at the same time;
I wouldn't be surprised if Roland never expected it to be used this
way.
Rereading your reply, yeah, you are trying to use it as a sequencer.
See if you can find one of those $150 MSQ-100s.
Sorry I misunderstood what you were trying to do. You're not confused,
you're just trying to do something it wasn't really meant to do.
It *ought* to still sync up, but it also *ought* to output FSK when
it's a MIDI slave and it don't do that either!
len.
|
461.15 | | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Thu Aug 14 1986 08:14 | 10 |
| Accodring to the book, unless I misunderstand it, it is supposed
to be able to sync to tape or din when in the MIDI trigger out mode.
But after another severla hours of trying everything I can think
of and allo f your suggestions again, it doesn't. It's funny though,
you can hear it speed up now and then, like a micro with a clock
gone haywire.....but only when trying to output the MIDI note on/note
offs, it sync fine when all I want is the audio. Oh well another
approach might work.
dave
|
461.16 | not enough Horsepower? | BAILEY::RHODES | | Thu Aug 14 1986 11:21 | 6 |
| Sounds like the micro may not have enough horsepower to handle
sync_to_tape input, MIDI message creation, and reading of sequencer
data all at the same time.
Todd.
|
461.17 | The Mysteries of MIDI Sync, Part 47 | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Fri Aug 15 1986 12:01 | 29 |
| The Roland SBX-10 exhibits a similar quirk - unless the click in
is absolutely Grade-A, it *looks* like it's in sync, but the MIDI
out is off "just a little" bit. After the session striping Karl's
tape in Dave Dreher's studio, I borrowed the SBX-10 for a night
and tried to map the click to FSK. No dice, my MSQ-700 would drop
one beat after about 30 bars (not discretely, it would drift off
until the accumulated drift amounted to a whole beat), no matter
how high I goosed the click in. (I also considered the possibility
that the levels were too *high*, and tried some things based on
that assumption - no dice.) I finally gave up and restriped the
tape directly by tapping (*again*) into the SBX-10, using its MIDI out
to sync the MSQ-100, and taking FSK out of the MSQ to tape. This
works, but given the accumulated delays I'm going to have to resort
to a digital delay and a short initial bar to allow me to align
the drums to what's already on tape. Let's see, if I drop 1/16th
off the initial bar, at 186 bpm, that's 744 16ths per minute or
12.4 16ths per second or 80.7 milliseconds per 16th, so the low end
of the 64 to 256 millisecond range should suffice, or if the
accumulated delay is more than 16 milliseconds I can drop down
to the 16 to 64 millisecond range. Maybe I should drop an 1/8
just to be safe, which would put me right in the middle of the
64 to 256 millisecond range.
Oops, sorry, just talking to myself...
I think Todd may be right, we're just overstressing those cute little
microprocessors.
len.
|
461.18 | Bailiff, whack his MIDI... | JAWS::COTE | Cogito Ergo Oops | Fri Aug 15 1986 12:17 | 9 |
| NO! No, no, no....
MIDI is God. It can do anything.
I find you blasphemous.
Keep trying, Len. It's in there. You must have been tired or something.
Edd
|
461.19 | SMPTE | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Aug 15 1986 15:20 | 5 |
| I've been avoiding saying this, because it will sound too haughty,
but I can't resist any more. What you guys need is SMPTE. It solves
all your problems, easily and simply. Get a Roland SBX-80.
I'm willing to loan mine, if sufficiently persuaded.
John Sauter
|
461.20 | And the answer is..... | BAXTA::BOTTOM_DAVID | | Mon Aug 18 1986 08:26 | 13 |
| What I did to solve my problem was this:
1. Recorded the sync track at the same time the 707 was in the MIDI
trigger out mode and recorded the synth bass line.
2. Placed the 234 in sync input, recycled the 707, synced to tape
recorded the drum part.
All done with that. A simple solution, I'm surprised I didn't think
of it earlier.
dave
|
461.21 | How Would SMPTE Help? | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 18 1986 11:01 | 12 |
| re .19
Don't mean to sound haughty either, but how will SMPTE solve what
basically seem to be level and signal capture problems? Yes, some
of these difficulties could be solved by *any* sync box (i.e., one
that will mix and match all possible sync sources and sinks), but
nothing we've tried to do required SMPTE encoding. Note specifically
that I had problems using an SBX-10, and SMPTE instead of FSK would
not have helped.
len.
|
461.22 | SMPTE avoids error accumulation | DSSDEV::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Aug 18 1986 13:59 | 7 |
| If you get a minor glitch in your sync audio signal, FSK will add or
drop a time pulse. After a while these add up to a noticable
inaccuracy. With SMPTE, the same signal problems will be detected and
corrected by the sync box, because the absolute time is encoded in the
signal. As a result glitches cause small local perturbations but they
don't add over a long piece.
John Sauter
|
461.23 | Oh, NOOoooo... | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 18 1986 18:28 | 5 |
| Gee thanks, John, just what I needed - a real good reason to get
an SBX-80!
len.
|