T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1627.1 | My math may be all screwed up. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad ... DTN 433-2408 | Wed Aug 17 1988 13:57 | 13 |
| Let's see here ...
38 notes 5 bytes 1 second 8 bits 1520 bits
-------- X ------- X ---------- X ------ = --------- or < 5% bandwidth
1 second 1 note 31250 bits 1 byte 1 second
5 bytes per note is a bit high, assuming 1 note on, 1 channel #, 1
velocity, 1 note-off, 1 off-velocity.
It certainly isn't due to MIDI bandwidth. I've never had a problem
like this, and have put out as many as 40/sec from one source.
-b
|
1627.2 | controller info | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Wed Aug 17 1988 14:00 | 11 |
| > Do you get into trouble with late notes and scrambled chords
While I haven't had any average note rates as high as 38/second, I have been
flooding the cable with lot's of pan/volume messages without any noticable
effects on timing. I suspect that these pan/volume messages introduce more
traffic than the 38 notes on-off/second that you mentioned since these are
continuous controllers and when I move my slider, it inserts lots of these
messages in short time spans, and I've done this on perhaps four channels at
the same time.
/Mitch
|
1627.3 | on a Mac SE | HPSRAD::NORCROSS | | Wed Aug 17 1988 14:01 | 4 |
| Oh, I forgot to mention that my traffic source is a Mac SE.
/Mitch
|
1627.4 | Might be in the voice allocation strategy | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Eat hot X-rays, alien menace! | Wed Aug 17 1988 15:41 | 17 |
|
I get a similar effect if I run out of voices on the Xpander; the
particulars depend on the notes and how fast they come.
If it's _very_ fast (>3 notes all step-entered to start at the exact
same clock pulse, tempo > 160 BPM, no free voices) then the Xpander
will occasionally 'lose' one or two. Annoying.
If it's slower but still the note-off and a note-on to the same
note, and still fast paced and no free voices, then the attack portion
of the sound will get lost and the note just sustains rather than
playing a new attack.
The cure for the Xpander is simple; don't run out of voices!
-Bill
|
1627.5 | narrowing it down | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Thu Aug 18 1988 12:47 | 5 |
| Well, I could make the errors go away by either slowing the tempo,
or silencing a line. Perhaps I will try sending out line out the
sound port. If the errors persist, it's the amiga. If they don't,
it's the box.
Tom
|
1627.6 | fwiw | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | Winds 20-30 knots, seas 5 to 7 | Thu Aug 18 1988 14:14 | 11 |
|
re: .-1
Had a similar result from flooding the MIDI line into my ST with
what was apparently 60 cycle hum translated into MIDI ON events.
That effectively hung my machine, since MIDI IN apparently has a
higher interrupt level than Metronome OUT...
Boy did the click go fast when I stopped the data stream in...
/pjh
|
1627.7 | Amiga horror | DENALI::KELLYNI | | Thu Aug 18 1988 21:00 | 33 |
| Firstly, I don't mean to sound negative about this. But....
Three years ago I bought an Amiga PC for basic home use and to learn
about MIDI. I just wanted a computer that would do simple word
processing and play nifty games. And I wanted it to do MIDI to
my two Casio synths. I went out and got the top of the line
(at the time) MIDI program (Soundscape pro by Memetics). I went
to the Amiga expo in California and met the author of Amiga Wolrd
and the wirter of Soundscape pro. I figured I was set for the time
of my life with all my new toys. Alasm Nothing that was promised was
delivered by the Amiga. The darn thing crashed all the time, it
was slow, and had no documents. The word processing was rediculas,
and the MIDI messages paused all the time when it didn't crash.
I wrote to Comidore and talked
to the dealers in town all the time. It seemed to me that all the
dealers wanted was money, really really really bad support for the
product was very appearent. Finally after I had spent hundreds
of hours trying to get some kind of help I told the guys at the
local dealers store that I was going to sell my Amiga and buy a
Mac (I was joking) and they threatend to throw me out of the store.
Needless to say, two days later I sold my Amiga and took the proceeds
to Apple and bought a Mac SE.
I even tried to get support from the local users group, but I am
sure we all have our own stories on those. Power hungry closed
minded Dogma attitude Alaskan Amiga users were nothing I wanted
to deal with...
Now I am happy and content. Mac is the only way to go...
|
1627.8 | | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:09 | 27 |
| Such a negative experience! I have wordperfect on the amiga & it
works great, better than any vax editor.
I have seen crashes on public domain crap, but I don't depend on
that stuff.
I have used the amiga to make video graphics for cable tv,
edit performance scripts, play my music correctly and in hi-fi
(compared to my live recordings) for the first time (try getting
the attention of 4 flutists, one who is about to get married,
one who is a conceited hotshot, one who is a freshman without
experience, and one who was good, to play your work well in
15 weeks of rehearsals. ) sign on the vax from home.
The work I am trying to play has about 20000 notes, lasts 20 minutes,
uses 150000 bytes (or maybe more) of storage, and has never been
played correctly because it's a piano duet and no one will
play it with me, and playing it solo was murder.
I feel lucky to have it played this well. It often has 20 simultaneous
notes, and the mks can only play 16, but the notes may come too
fast. I played the piece with one line of 5 note chords going
out the audio port (truncated to 4 notes), and the regularity was
better but it did miss one beat once. DMCS is only specd to handle
16 voices, so I'm exceeding both the dmcs and the mks20 voice
limits.
My music is just too hard to play for any medium.
I have a feeling that if we compared our mac and amiga account
books showing all costs, I'd come out about half or less.
Tom
|
1627.9 | Gotta throw more money at it... | HAMSTR::COTE | | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:18 | 10 |
| >My music is just too hard to play for any medium...
Try syncing two sequencers together, each feeding a seperate
MKS-20....
Your music isn't too hard, you just haven't figured out how to
run a MIDI network yet. But I, for one, am impressed with your
recent turnaround regarding MIDI and sequencers...
Edd
|
1627.10 | Thanks for all the presents!! | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:26 | 11 |
| Yeah, right, I've designed fiber optic links, 422/232 convertors,
debugged prototype vax-pdp parallel links, but havn't learned little
old midi "networks." Would you like to buy me the next mks20 and
the two sequencers, gombo? I'm not going to sell the stock when
it's bottoming out. Should I sell my nieces? This is the only
piano piece this demanding. Should I buy 1200$ is gear for one
piece? Why didn't you suggest overdubbing? I could just
record two lines and then add the other two lines. I've always
been good at manually syncing tape decks by hook or by crook.
DMCS allows silencing lines, to do this.
Tom
|
1627.11 | Whatever it is, I wouldn't like to be called one | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:35 | 8 |
| Re .-1
Hey Edd -- just how offensive is the term 'Gombo'? Are you just
friends having a joke, is it a term of endearment in the States,
or are you hopping mad?
Richard.
|
1627.12 | A cross between Rambo and Gumby? -mike- | TOOK::DDS_SEC | I keep Roland down the hill | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:38 | 0 |
1627.13 | Crossed cables at 50 meters... | GERBIL::COTE | | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:39 | 8 |
| ...depends on the context and intent.
In this case, I assume I've been slapped by Tom and rise to
him by challenging him to duel.
Pick the spot, Knave Janzen. I'll pick the weapons...
Edd
|
1627.14 | Take that! | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 10:45 | 3 |
| You people equate a failure to budget for your retirement with
technical expertise.
Tom
|
1627.15 | Look No Wrinkles | WARMER::KENT | | Fri Aug 19 1988 11:15 | 9 |
|
re-1
But I retired last year !
Look at the fun I'me having.
Paul.
|
1627.16 | Good ol' Gumby | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Fri Aug 19 1988 11:18 | 5 |
| Prof Gumby is someone I've always empathised with.
Not Rambo.
Richard.
|
1627.17 | and that! | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 11:22 | 2 |
| and you equate MIDI technical knowledge with making good music!
Tom
|
1627.18 | Counter-thwack... | HAMSTR::COTE | | Fri Aug 19 1988 11:22 | 8 |
| ...and you, Jester Janzen, equate difficulty of execution with
sophistication of thought.
Throw out your Amiga and MKS-20. MIDI is a toy, joy-boy. Go back
to your plastic flutes, flakey cables and other trappings of
your trade.
Gumbo
|
1627.19 | On with our regularly scheduled program... | JAWS::COTE | I'm not making this up... | Fri Aug 19 1988 12:13 | 8 |
| OK, Tom's been silent for almost an hour. He obviously knows he's
whipped. I win.
Come back, Tommy. All is forgiven...
XXX
Edd
|
1627.20 | I know I do! | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 12:18 | 4 |
| ergo, you equate failing to budget for your retirement with making
good music!
Tom
|
1627.21 | Interface prob, maybe? | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad ... DTN 433-2408 | Fri Aug 19 1988 12:25 | 16 |
| Tom, I tried this with a piece I hacked together. Probably not as
complex as something you'd do (I'm not being cute, I mean it), but
nevertheless, it worked without a hitch. We're talking between 15-25
notes/sec.
I was using MTP on an ST driving 2 ESQ-Ms and a TX7. ESQ(1) overflowed
to ESQ(2) overflowed to TX7. Tones didn't match, but I had no late
note (or other timing) problems.
Maybe you have a UART problem. What kinda MIDI interface are you using
with the Amiga?
-b
PS - for whoever's punch it is - tell him that if he was any dumber his
head would suck in.
|
1627.22 | What he said! | JAWS::COTE | I'm not making this up... | Fri Aug 19 1988 12:34 | 1 |
|
|
1627.23 | sending midi time code didn't help either | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 12:34 | 4 |
| I have 1 synth, so can't do overflow.
I am borrowing len's simple level interface from mimetics.
hm.
Tom
|
1627.24 | Only way to be sure is to get another synth. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad ... DTN 433-2408 | Fri Aug 19 1988 13:38 | 12 |
| Your synth is an MKS-20? Can it do overflow? If so, maybe you can
borrow someone else's just for testing? If not, find someone who has
enough voices to accomodate your music and test your Amiga with that
setup.
It's entirely possible that the MKS could go batzo when stuffed with
too many notes simultaneously (but I'll stick with the pokey UART hunch
for now).
Good luck.
-b
|
1627.25 | The new one does o-flow | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Aug 19 1988 16:32 | 4 |
| MKS-20 does not do overflow. That's one of the new features of
the MKS-20 follow up, the P-330 (I think that's what it's called).
db
|
1627.26 | | SALSA::MOELLER | DECblocks Product Support | Fri Aug 19 1988 17:21 | 21 |
| My, my..TOm's purchase (I assume) of an MKS-20 was certainly low-key..
can this be the first public admission ? I notice you typed it
in lower case.. hoping we wouldn't notice ? If you bought it new,
the 1000PX Kurzweil has 24voice polyphony, and a better sound,
for about $2k total.
First an Amiga, now a digital rackmount piano unit.. whatcha using
as a MIDI keyboard ? Or are you step-entering ? What'll happen
to those chops... *I* use a sequencer, but I *never* enter in step
time ('cause I don't know how !!).. and I never ever ever quantize,
and never have since I was 9 years old. I bet if Conlon Nancarrow
was 50 years younger, and/or lived in the U.S., he'd be using a
MIDI sequencer and 'piano' SGU(s), along with a score-printing program.
Also, regarding the 'use two sequencers in sync' reply, a C64/128
with 'Dr T' software is quite affordable. Of course if it's just for
one piece then you use tape..
"I just don't know how you guys afford all that MIDI junk."
One unit at a time, is the correct answer.
|
1627.27 | | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Fri Aug 19 1988 17:34 | 3 |
| and used, for half price, or a third the price of the junk you bought.
I enter directly in musical notation.
Tom
|
1627.28 | Reply to Janzen | DENALI::KELLYNI | | Fri Aug 19 1988 17:55 | 16 |
| Reply to ANT::JANZEN in reguards to note 1627.8
You mentioned that you have spent about half the money for your
computer than I have for my Mac SE?? Is this true?? Does your
Comidore have 1Meg of RAM, 40Megs of storage and can do anything
you want without refering to manuals all the time? I have never
looked at my Mac manual (Which I could learn a hell of a lot by
doing) and can do anything I have wanted to so far (Including learn
4th dimension in a week). All of this only cost me 2500$ + the
software cost. Look into a hard drive and an upgrade for your Amiga
if you have the 1000 or the 2000 and we'll see who got more for
the buck... I figure I came out ahead by selling the thing before
it became extinct. No insults intended here, just defending my
point and past decisions.
--Nick
|
1627.29 | | SALSA::MOELLER | DECblocks Product Support | Fri Aug 19 1988 17:56 | 19 |
| >< Note 1627.27 by ANT::JANZEN "Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23" >
> and used, for half price, or a third the price of the junk you bought.
Well, my new 1000PX sits right next to my USED Fostex 8track, under
my USED TEAC 4track, over my USED Nakamichi cassette dex, near my
USED Marantz stereo preamp/amp, under my USED TEAC graphic EQ, on
the same table as my USED Macintiosh 512K.. and on and on..
I think that the 1000PX is worth 3x a used MKS-20.. and I used to
have an MKS-20, as you know. there's all these Kurzweil instrument
samples.. 128 separate full-keyboard sounds. It all depends on
what you need. I sold the MKS-20 and a motorcycle to buy the 1000PX,
$15 (not a misprint) out of pocket.
>I enter directly in musical notation.
Oh, so no MIDI keyboard. Step-time is nothing to be ashamed of.
karl
|
1627.30 | ZAP!! BOING!!! WHAP!! | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Sun Aug 21 1988 22:13 | 11 |
| > < Note 1627.29 by SALSA::MOELLER "DECblocks Product Support" >
> Oh, so no MIDI keyboard. Step-time is nothing to be ashamed of.>>
>
> karl
Neither is musical literacy, and having ca. 120 scores of about
5 hours of music for orchestra, chamber groups, piano, computer,
vocals, and electronics from 16 years of LITERATE composing, as I have,
as opposed to improvising into a computer/recorder and editing out
the boring parts and mistakes, as you do.
Tom
|
1627.31 | speaking as one who can't do either... | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Mon Aug 22 1988 05:09 | 13 |
| I think it's a trifle unfair of Karl M to pick on Tom just
because he can't play a keyboard. Just mentioning the word 'ashamed'
is clearly upsetting. He writes scores, and enters
them in step-time; keyboard skills might come later -- just sorta
'click', you know, Karl.
But how long does it take to enter 'about 5 hours of music for
orchestra' in step-time?
Richard.
!*)
|
1627.32 | Not Again?!? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 22 1988 09:57 | 9 |
| Could we possibly avoid this "I'm a better composer than you" crap?
It has nothing to do with what equipment you have or how you do
it. The music that results is what counts. Tom is well known for
his denial of the relevance if any music but his own. Karl shouldn't
let himself be dragged into this. Can we get back to the subject
at hand, whatever it was?
len.
|
1627.33 | serial buffer size? | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Mon Aug 22 1988 10:02 | 7 |
| I forgot to this weekend, but I will try enlarging the serial
buffer from 512 byte to whatever. the only problem is having to
play so much music to be certain of having fixed it (about 12 minutes).
I am a pianist too, marvin; I played in public since 1981, but quit
in January.
Tom
|
1627.34 | details on rubato | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Mon Aug 22 1988 10:05 | 10 |
| Oh, incidentally, about step time. The rubato in my works is
notated into the note durations, so exact tempo sounds very fluid
in some of my works. I notated very exact rhythms because I wanted
them played that way, so just entering the musical notation from
the score is the best way to do it. Also, non-fluid interfering
rhythms must also be exact in order to make their effect, true
of other of my works.
I do not expect to have a keyboard controller, unless I can sell
the piano I've used for 22 years. I just can't afford it.
Tom
|
1627.35 | or any rock,pop,soft jazz,or disco | ANT::JANZEN | Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23 | Mon Aug 22 1988 10:40 | 7 |
| < Note 1627.32 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS >
>Tom is well known for
> his denial of the relevance if any music but his own.
> len.
That's not quite true len. I merely deny the relevance of any music
from the COMMUSIC conference.
Tom
|
1627.36 | um .. soul? tamla? indie reggae? | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Mon Aug 22 1988 13:29 | 6 |
| Fair enough on the piano playing front, Tom. Haven't heard the early
COMMUSIC tapes, before you gave up.
BTW -- calling me Marvin is like me calling you Ant!
Richard.
|
1627.37 | boom. whang. bam. | SALSA::MOELLER | Good, or just codependent ? | Wed Aug 31 1988 20:23 | 35 |
| < Note 1627.36 by MARVIN::MACHIN >
>Fair enough on the piano playing front, Tom. Haven't heard the early
>COMMUSIC tapes, before you gave up.
Sorry, Richard, Tom wasn't on the early Commusic tapes. He felt
his music would clash esthetically with all our 'Bruce Springsteen
covers'.
>Note 1627.30 by ANT::JANZEN "Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23"
>> < Note 1627.29 by SALSA::MOELLER "DECblocks Product Support" >
>> Oh, so no MIDI keyboard. Step-time is nothing to be ashamed of.>>
> Neither is musical literacy, and having ca. 120 scores of about
> 5 hours of music for orchestra, chamber groups, piano, computer,
> vocals, and electronics from 16 years of LITERATE composing, as I have,
Gosh. What an intimidating background. What a shame it hasn't
led to listenable, enjoyable music. If I had YOUR background,
'Gumbo', I'd be doing better than rigid Classics-By-Computer and
dull boogie-woogie. I'm doing far better than that anyhow.
I anticipate the rejoinder that it isn't fair to judge your music
by these throwaways. Now that you've once again 'given up music',
you're now somehow free to let us hear your REAL music... did I get
that right ?
> ..as opposed to improvising into a computer/recorder and editing out
> the boring parts and mistakes, as you do.
Another typical Catch-22.. if I step-timed, sorry, 'mouse-driven entry'
my music, as you do, you'd slag me off for not having/using keyboard
technique.
karl
|
1627.38 | on paper=serious.on tape=just fooling around | SALSA::MOELLER | Good, or just codependent ? | Wed Aug 31 1988 21:14 | 25 |
| Your indulgence, your graces, whilst I further chastise this varlet..
>Note 1627.30 by ANT::JANZEN "Tom 296-5421 LMO2/O23"
> ..Neither is musical literacy, and having ca. 120 scores of about
> 5 hours of music for orchestra, chamber groups, piano, computer,
> vocals, and electronics from 16 years of LITERATE composing, as I have,
When I look at my own musical output over the last few years, I
see that I have easily 100 works, 6-10 hours of music, covering many
styles and orchestrations. The difference is that mine is all ON TAPE,
listenable, well-recorded studio and live performances, rather than
a bunch of literate, dusty scores sitting in a closet.
>Note 1627.32 by DRUMS::FEHSKENS
> -< Not Again?!? >-
>Karl shouldn't let himself be dragged into this.
'Dragged into' ? I live for this..
>Could we possibly avoid this "I'm a better composer than you" crap?
Apparently not. A bit late now for 'next unseen', eh ?
karl
|
1627.39 | nyah nyah! | 18021::BOTTOM_DAVID | Everyday I got the blues | Thu Sep 01 1988 09:08 | 6 |
| Tom is a better composer than me technically....it's just that there's
not likly to be a market for his stuff...and there might be for
mine.
dbII
|
1627.40 | Ha ha! | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Sep 01 1988 09:51 | 5 |
| It's a good job this exchange is funny, else two computer engineers
arguing about who is the greates composer might seem a bit
-- um -- laughable!
Richard.
|
1627.41 | Really Important Stuff!!! | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Thu Sep 01 1988 12:42 | 4 |
| Makes me feel downright proud to hobnob with such mature intellects.
len.
|
1627.42 | Dusty vacuum tubes | DFLAT::DICKSON | Koyaanisqatsi | Thu Sep 01 1988 12:54 | 2 |
| I wonder if Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copeland every got into arguments about
who was the better engineer.
|
1627.43 | Yes, but don't compare Moeller to THEM | ANT::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Thu Sep 01 1988 13:00 | 9 |
| On a television show about Aaron Copland (speelling),
Leonard Bernstein and Aaron were on a couch. Leonard pointed
out that he was Aaron's assistant or secretary during the
writing of Appalachian Spring, and that he, Lenny, had written
a few bars of the original score, and then Aaron broke in
arguing, "you're saying that YOU wrote part of MY music?????"
and so they started arguing, but it was edited so we never
got to the "who's parts of Appalachian are better" argument.
Tom
|
1627.44 | Do tell... | MARVIN::MACHIN | | Thu Sep 01 1988 13:14 | 15 |
| Reminds me of Mel Brooks' "The Producers"..
"And ze Fuhrer could dance ze pants off Churchill".
Hey Tom -- what would get you more pi*sed off:
1) Karl M. claims to have written one of your best pieces while
in the womb, only to discard it shortly after birth;
2) Andre Previn joins digital and has the techy idea that's worth
vice-presidency moments before you do.
Richard. 8*)
|
1627.45 | Out of the rathole for a split second. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad ... DTN 433-2408 | Thu Sep 01 1988 13:21 | 5 |
| I hate to break up the party, kiddies, but ...
Did you ever fix your note rate problem, Tom?
-b
|
1627.46 | I sort of retired this problem | ANT::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Thu Sep 01 1988 13:34 | 15 |
| I have not tried to fix the problem yet.
I am working on other pieces that do ot
producethis symptom. If I try this piece again I will
enlarge the serial buffer in the sysgen program, after looking to
see if there is a special MIDI device or if it uses the regular
serial.device.
I am entering all the music I've written. I'm up to mid-1975.
I was disappointed that from 1971 to 1975 I wrote only about
40 minutes worth (improvised 30 minutes that was recorded,
and improvised untold unrecorded hours) + a couple scores I
couldn't find. But in late 1975 I wrote another 30 minutes.
The point is that no other of these variegated
pieces have any rate problems, even when the synthesizer and the
amiga are both playing (the amiga can synthesize directly).
Tom
|
1627.47 | arpeggiate | ANT::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Mon Sep 05 1988 23:44 | 4 |
| I probably can't change the buffer size since there is no Preferences
(sysgen) on the DMCS disk, so the heck with it. It happened
on another piece hitting 16 notes at a time, a sort of arpegiation.
Tom
|