T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1368.1 | Eight is NOT enough | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Wed May 11 1988 10:30 | 9 |
| Well there are things out there that have more than 8 voices, but 8
sure seems to be the standard. I am somewhat surprised that despite the
rapid pace of technology, we still have been "stuck" on 8 for so long.
In my experience, you really need more.
Roland MT-32 has "up to" 32 (depends on complexity of the patch), Roland
S-550 (sampler) has 16.
db
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1368.2 | Comples = complex below... | HEART::MACHIN | | Wed May 11 1988 10:44 | 10 |
| Humph. The MT32 seems better than straight 8-voice, even if only
simple patches count as 'single-voice'.
But to add to .0: surely, more timbres also means more immediately
comples sounds, sinc voices that can fire simultaneously over MIDI
can surely be stacked internally. I imagine you could create a knockout
8-voice performance patch with a 32-voice multitimbral synth in
this way.
Richard.
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1368.3 | Maybe not 32, but more than 8 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Wed May 11 1988 11:04 | 4 |
| True (about the MT-32) but I think realistically you can expect
to be able to have more than 8 voices available for most applications.
Also, the drums seem independent of the partial allocation so they
also count in a lesser sense.
|
1368.4 | Variable Voices | TYFYS::MOLLER | Vegetation: A way of life | Wed May 11 1988 12:12 | 10 |
| The drums on the MT-32 are independant, as far as the other patches
go. I'd say 16 to 20 is average (at least that seems to be what
some of my sequences are using). The thing I like about the MT-32
is it offers similar patches using various quantities of layers,
so, if you find that you need to tweek a sequence, you select a
simpler version of a sound & save yourself a layer or two. 8 voices
are fine if you are playing live. If you are sequencing, you tend
to run out of resources pretty fast.
Jens
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1368.5 | Simultaneous Timbres??? | AQUA::ROST | Sweeper at the Hilton Hotel | Wed May 11 1988 12:24 | 12 |
|
However, while the MT32 can supply "up to" 32 voices, it still
only handles eight *simultaneous* timbres.
Do any of the 16 or 24 voice boxes out there support more than eight
timbres???
The number eight itself is no suprise, after all most synths are
computer based now and orienting things in byte-sized chunks makes
sense.
|
1368.6 | monopatch vs multipatch | HEART::MACHIN | | Wed May 11 1988 12:33 | 15 |
| Until .5, I was impressed by the MT32.
Definition of terms required. Which of the following are true:
32 note polyphonic + monotimbral = 32 notes (one patch) sound
simultaneously
32 voice poly + multitimbral = 32 notes (up to 32 patches) sound
simultaneously
By the way, there are loads of computery numbers -- shame they picked
8!
Richard.
|
1368.7 | I wonder where the 20 came from | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | You're walking along the beach and you find a tortise... | Wed May 11 1988 12:34 | 5 |
| The EPS sampler is up to 20, or as few as one. You pays your $2K
and you takes your choice.
Dynamic allocation of the 20 voices, of course. Each patch takes
as many as it wants.
|
1368.8 | Is 8 so bad for timbrality? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Wed May 11 1988 12:42 | 11 |
| 8 seems like an entirely reasonable number for multi-timbrality.
Remember MIDI essentially limits you to 16 timbres anyway, and
since you can do patch changing via MIDI the 8 timbres limit only
means that you can't have more than 8 timbres at any one instant,
but you can have hundreds of timbres during any one song.
Hardly seems limiting to me.
The timbrality seems more limited by 16 MIDI channels than anything
else. So with 8 + drums the MT-32 gives you something that can
fill slightly more than half your timbral space anyway.
|
1368.9 | A modest proposal... | HEART::MACHIN | | Wed May 11 1988 12:48 | 4 |
| I suppose so. So a good combination would be 32 note poly, 8 voice
multitimbral.
Richard.
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1368.10 | These are trained professionals, please don't try this at home. | NYMPH::ZACHWIEJA | DECwindows in my lifetime | Wed May 11 1988 12:56 | 16 |
|
The slick MIDIOT can double the timbral space on some synth modules
that allow odd and even note seperation and scale definition. For
instance the TX-81Z. Have one TX-81Z respond to only even notes,
but change the scale so that your standard twelve notes are spread
out across 24, do the same to a second but have it respond only to
odd notes.
You decrease your range by half, which is okay for most orchestral
intruments, and can only seperate the note on-off data, but you
CAN have two timbres receive on the same channel this way.
Note also that your score will be somewhat *^&$%# up but what do
you want for a $350 solution.
_sjz.
|
1368.11 | What about setting up keyboard splits?? | FREKE::LEIGH | | Wed May 11 1988 13:24 | 7 |
| Another solution for more than one timbre on a channel at one time
is to set up a split point with two separate patches. Notes going
to one section are played with one patch and those going to the
other section get played with the other patch.
chad
|
1368.12 | FWIW | MIZZOU::SHERMAN | Baron of Graymatter | Wed May 11 1988 13:58 | 13 |
| This has been mentioned before, but with the TZ you can make each
voice respond only to a certain range. You can also put a note
shift on each voice to compensate (+/- 2 octaves, as I recall). There
are 8 voices, so if you split a keyboard into 8 sections and shifted
the notes as appropriate you could independently control all 8 voices,
each over about an octave range, by using different keys and transmit
this all on one channel. If you are sequencing and are limited
to 16 MIDI channels, you could tie in 16 TZ's on the same bus and
run an orchestra of 128 mono voices or 512 operators.
Steve
|
1368.13 | 15 is almost 16. | PANGLS::BAILEY | Steph Bailey | Wed May 11 1988 14:08 | 8 |
| Yes, the Kawai K5 and K5m can produce up to 15 timbres simultaneously.
Why 15? Because 5 lines fits on the editing screen the way they
have it layed out, and there are three pages for each screen.
Each timbre may produce a fixed or dynamic number of voices.
Steph
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1368.14 | Thickness | AQUA::ROST | Sweeper at the Hilton Hotel | Wed May 11 1988 14:27 | 14 |
|
As for why it would be nice to have more than 8 timbres simultaneously:
Layering....
The MT32 architecture is ill suited for this (unless you have a
computer hooked up to it) due to the oddball MIDI channel assignments.
But by placing more than one timbre on each MIDI channel for layering
you can easily find use for more than 8 timbres.
|
1368.15 | 8 strikes again | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Let's keep sax and violins on TV | Wed May 11 1988 15:55 | 21 |
|
re: Bill and your comment about the EPS
The EPS, while it does 20 'voices', still only allows up to 8
simultaneous timbres (instruments) at a time, memory permitting.
The 20 voices are dynamically assigned, as available, to whatever
instruments need them. You may bias the assignments somewhat by
setting an instrument to only want a certain number of voices (the
'set number of voices' prompt)...
So there's another example of the magic number 8. Of course, the
8 are all it holds at a time anyway. Not too shabby for a $2K sampler.
I have no idea why it only deals with 20 voices, but this is a sampler
with 13-bit i/o, 16 bit storage, a 32 bit processor, 24 bit floating
point data munging, and a bunch of other crazy numbers that don't
make sense.
It even allows for 10 outputs...
/pjh
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1368.16 | multisample to get at all 20 | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | The light that burns twice as bright burns half as long | Thu May 12 1988 15:07 | 7 |
| But you can multisample across the EPS keyboard, so one instrument
might have more than one timbre (look at the "drum kit" instrument
:-) )
So you can have what sounds like 20 simultaneous timbres...
-Bill
|
1368.17 | yeah, okay... | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Let's keep sax and violins on TV | Thu May 12 1988 15:45 | 8 |
|
The latin percussion is better.
Yeah, fair enough, but hacky anyway. You end up splitting your
instrument into smaller pieces. That's like having a 'sax section'
made up of alto, tenor and baritone... eats memory, but doable.
/pjh
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1368.18 | Uh, This Little Sequencer Played Strings, and... | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri May 13 1988 15:34 | 12 |
| The MIDI limit of 16 simultaneous timbres is probably not a serious
limitation for pop applications, but for "classical" music it's just
barely adequate. I'll check some scores tonight to get some numbers
on what really happens in "representative" orchestral scores (e.g.,
a Beethoven symphony, a Mahler symphony, a Strauss tone poem,
Schoenberg's Gurrelieder, a Chopin etude (joke, ha ha!)).
You can get around this limit by running multiple MIDI busses from
multiple sequencers synched together.
len.
|
1368.19 | sequencer monster | SALSA::MOELLER | I LIKE 'point-n-grunt' interfaces! | Mon May 16 1988 17:20 | 2 |
| The Kurzweil 1000PX gens 24 voices simultaneously, over 16 timbres
max (because of the 16 MIDI chan limit, natch).. nice.
|
1368.20 | | GIBSON::DICKENS | Surfing with my Buick | Wed May 25 1988 14:30 | 7 |
| re .18
There are several multiple-out midi interfaces available for software
sequencers. C-labs Creator can use 64 midi channels - 1-16 x 4
busses. A reviewer claimed he would need this with all his synth
gear, effects devices and his light show all sequenced.
|
1368.21 | Why don't folks like the poor K5? | NCVAX1::ALLEN | | Sat May 28 1988 16:00 | 24 |
| re. .0 and .13
I was wondering if anyone was going to mention the K5! Steve
had one before I did, but in the past 6 months or so I've had a
ball with it. There ARE 16 voices available to sequence or play.
As Steve mentioned you can only STACK 15 of these at a time in what
Kawai calls "Multi" patches. But, if I understand the definition
of the term "multi-timbral", the K5 will give you twice the 8-voice
limit you now face.
re. .18
All of the above is great when working on classical music.
I have been sequencing a lot of baroque chamber music (Handel's
Concerti Grossi, etc.). Having 16 parts available means that with
just the one K5, I can cover all the voices and still have a few
left over for continuo, voices, percussion, etc.. At the risk of
sounding like a Kawai commercial, they have just come out with a
new synth, the K1, which on initial hearing sounds good and has
percussion (which the K5 did not). (I am thinking of getting the
K1 in a module which should give me more voices than I know what
to do with).
Bill
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