T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1061.1 | Look for a cheap sequencer. | ACORN::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Tue Dec 15 1987 08:34 | 13 |
| I'm not quite sure where the emphasis is in your requirements, but
what you want seems to [mostly] be a sequencer.
For staff representation, you pay through the nose (~$250 or more).
There are tons of top drawer sequencers. (Hybrid Arts, Passport, and Dr.
T all make something appropriate). If you want to just record it, and
never see it, you can pay as little as $45 or so.
As far as a dedicated drum machine sequencer, there is no such beast.
(At least I'm quite sure there isn't). How's your C?
Steph
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1061.2 | There's some software... | JAWS::COTE | If ya gotta go, go 1st class... | Tue Dec 15 1987 08:36 | 4 |
| The November edition of EM did a review on some dedicated drum
software. I forget what units it ran on....
Edd
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1061.3 | PC + Software needed | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Tue Dec 15 1987 08:43 | 15 |
| What .0 needs is a PC based MIDI sequencer with extra software to convert
MIDI into musical notation. There is some software out there that does
this, tho I don't know much about this end of things.
1. You set the tempo of the sequencer and listen to its metronome
2. You hit the keys on the front of the TR505
3. Key hits get recorded via MIDI to the sequencer
4. Run the notation program over the sequence, and print it out.
Note that some quantization adjustment may be necessary within the sequencer
in order to remove the human timing errors from the sequence.
Now, can anyone suggest a PC and some software?
Todd.
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1061.4 | Some day I'll listen before I speak... | HPSTEK::RHODES | | Tue Dec 15 1987 08:46 | 6 |
| Dummy me. He already has an Atari ST.
Does the EA Delux Music Construction Set have this capability?
Todd.
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1061.5 | A bit of a clarification of requirements | HARDY::JKMARTIN | Jay Martin | Tue Dec 15 1987 09:27 | 18 |
| Well, perhaps I should say that having the drum sequences displayed
as notes on a staff is really frosting on the cake, and that just
displaying "dots" (or "bars") on a timeline would be more than
adequate.
Please excuse my obvious ignorance of available software. Are you
folks saying that a "plain vanilla" sequencer can record notes in
real time and allow subsequent editing? (Oh, did I mention the
need to edit before?...)
Re: .1
Why yes, my C is just fine, thanx. I've been looking for an
interesting music-related program to write, and this might be just
the ticket to hack on. BUT, I don't want to do anything if I can
go out and buy software.
As much as I love writing code, I'd much rather jam...
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1061.6 | Try your local music store. | MAY20::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Wed Dec 16 1987 17:23 | 26 |
| >> ... can a vanilla sequencer ...
Yes. All sequencers allow for real-time recording, and virtually
all provide editing capabilities after music is recorded.
How much editing is what varies. For example, a $200+
program would (probably) allow insertion and deletion of arbitrary
notes and sections. It also provide some sort of display of what
you have on the tracks. (dots or notes).
I have Passport's MIDI Soft Studio, a $60 program which only allows
the copying of some portion of one track to an arbitrary point in
another track. So if you want to insert a note where there is a
rest, you will have to delete that beat from the track, create a
new track with the appropriate note, and then insert that note into
the first track. Not very easy, but usable. I usually re-record
a whole section rather than trying to twiddle with individual notes
in this way. MIDIsoft does not provide any form of display.
The best thing to do is to go to your local music store and ask
to play with some ST sequencers. I'm sure you can find one that
will do what you want, but the question is, can you stand the price.
Steph
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1061.7 | Clever People these ! | MINDER::KENT | But there's no hole in the middle | Thu Dec 17 1987 04:21 | 12 |
|
I have been looking fairly seriously at the Atari based Steinberg
PRO-24 software in the last week or so. This would certainly offer
you the functionality you require including a GEM based score editor,
which is the main reason I am finding it irresistable at the moment.
Unfortunately, as Steph implied it costs mucho moolah, 280 pounds
in the U.K. and will only run on a 1040ST. But it looks like one
of the best Midi recorder's I have personally seen.
Paul.
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