T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1764.1 | This offer void where inhibited... | WEFXEM::COTE | The Ether Bunny | Wed Nov 09 1988 15:11 | 5 |
| Why don't you bring that sucker up to "Fast Eddie's Hack-O-Rama"??
I'll make you some patches...
Edd
|
1764.2 | Already topics hanging around. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Wed Nov 09 1988 16:48 | 3 |
| Do a DIR/TITL=PATCH or DIR/TITL=ENSONIQ.
There are lots of topics on this already.
|
1764.3 | sure.................. | MUDDIN::DEBARROS | | Thu Nov 10 1988 12:39 | 8 |
| I'm sorry Brad.. I didnt see anything pertaining to my question!
I did dir/titl=ensoniq,patch,sq80 and also did DIR #. * and went
thru all the replys. The only thing I found was some Esq-1 patches.
|
1764.4 | Now I can't find 'em either. 8-( | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Thu Nov 10 1988 15:14 | 8 |
| Hmmmm - I know that there have been Voice Crystal discussions in here
before in one of the ESQ topics. I need to get that blasted topical
directory and keywords completed.
Sigh. Too much work, too little time. Anyway, I think VC and Cesium
are probably your best bet. db? Anyone else?
-b
|
1764.5 | Beware of the Drek | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Nov 10 1988 15:48 | 44 |
| > db?
This note really should be moved into one of the many ESQ topics...
I don't care which really, I'd just prefer not to have yet another
ESQ-1 topic... 'nuf said...
Anyway, I have tried Voice Crystals 1-3. These are regarded to be
among the best. The positive side is that the sounds are all very
interesting, although not all very useful.
I was hoping to get a lot of realistic instrument copies (sounds
that attempt to sound like REAL instruments as opposed to synthetic
sounds). In that regard I was a little bit dissapointed in that
there werent' that many of them, although the ones that they
did have all get A's and B's in my book.
I ended up buying the VC-3. It just had a lot of good sounds that
I find myself using ALL THE TIME in both my MIDI home-recording work
and my Top-40 band. I particularly love the SYMPHNY strings which
are as lush a backing string sound as I've heard. I've already created
about a dozen variations on it by diddling things like attack, decay,
filters, etc. Whenever I need a string sound, I generally start with
SYMPHNY and diddle it to be what I need.
I can tell you this though. I would NEVER EVER buy this kind of
software without having had the chance to play with it MYSELF on
a real machine (tape demos are nice, but not enough for me).
There's a lot of drek being sold out there. Some of it is just
minor variations on the stock sounds (the kind of thing anyone could
have done), some of it is totally useless unpleasant sounds, and lots
of it is just plain garbage.
I'll only buy what I can try out on my own, as was the case with the
VC-3.
BTW, you apparently read the Transoniq Hacker, but for the benefit of
those who don't, they review third party patches. In my opinion their
reviews tend to be a bit too positive to be believeable, but they
help evaluate things on a relative scale at least.
db
|
1764.6 | Just what I wanted to hear | MUDDIN::DEBARROS | | Thu Nov 10 1988 17:06 | 14 |
| So.... db seeing we are on the subject, have you tried the
sax2,sax3,sax4 patch in novembers issue? I looked at it briefly
and it appears sax3 is layered with sax2, and split with sax4 or
something like that. If you've tried it, was it worth creating
the patch? We know how cheap sax patches sound.
Thanks for the feedback....
Eric
I heard that at Fast Eddies Hackorama.... Rap Master Edd C. has
made replicas of Scholar plus modems answering, and equivalent
head set noise on a 56K circuit. Have to get those patches.
|
1764.7 | Not even worth stealing. | MIDEVL::YERAZUNIS | I don't smoke !! That was the flamethrower !! | Thu Nov 10 1988 19:57 | 12 |
| I borrowed a Voice Crystal 1 for a couple of days... Would you believe
that there was not a SINGLE PATCH in that thing that I considered
new and interesting enough to be WORTH stealing?
:-)
But seriously, I didn't find them _bad_, just more of the same.
Nothing that made me want to go and play (ok, sequence) something
new and interesting.
Listen to them before you buy them.
-Bill (avoiding the should-you-write-your-own-patches-rathole)
|
1764.8 | How to audition Voice Crystal patches | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Nov 11 1988 10:29 | 42 |
| I get my issues from someone else. I don't think I have the
November issue yet because what you've mentioned doesn't ring
a bell.
But all this talk has rung another bell which I forgot to mention.
Some of the Voice Crystal sounds are layered but:
1) Do not follow the labelling convention for labelled sounds
suggested by the manual so you can't tell by the name.
2) The layer programs are all in the INTERNAL bank. Which
means that the proper way to audition Voice Crystal sounds
is to copy them into the internal bank.
I had the VC-3 for about 6 months before I noticed that. I didn't
get any documentation with mine (other than a list of the program
names) and had no way of knowing.
The third party patch reviews in the Transoniq Hacker have made
pleas to the programmers to provide some number of the following
with their patchs
1) A description of the sound and how it's intended to be used
2) Where possible (data cassette tape and SQ-80 floppy media) provide
demos that use the sounds so that they can be heard in a
musical context.
I think these are GREAT IDEAS and thankfully many programmers are
doing these things nowadays.
Some programmers will also allow you to select each of the forty
sounds you get from their collection. The typical thing is that
you get an audio demo tape, and then mark the 40 sounds from the
tape you want, send it in, then they give you a bank with those
sounds.
This seems like a good way of weeding out the throwaway patches and
getting real value for what you pay.
db
|
1764.9 | How much ? | COGVAX::LABAK | Don't Worry..Be Cranky | Tue Nov 15 1988 12:13 | 7 |
| Dave,
Can you tell me how much the VC-3 cost and where you
bought it?
Thanks
Rick L.
|
1764.10 | Someplace in Atlanta around Buckhead I think | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Tue Nov 15 1988 13:41 | 17 |
| Actually, I bought it some place in Atlanta and I don't remember the
name. I bargained them down to $50 (no great deal really, I think
it's like $39 by mail) and then they presented me with a $53 Visa
charge and told me the $3 was the overhead for the Visa.
I pointed out that Visa sent a note with a recent bill that said to
report any place that charges EXTRA for paying with a credit card
(nearly any gas station but....) and that I intended to do that if they
didn't rewrite the bill.
The manager was consulted... he apologized for the "mistake". I paid
$50. I would not go back there. In fact, the only reason I didn't
walk out was because the salesman was pretty darn good about letting
me demo the patches and I have moral problems with going into music
stores to demo stuff and then mail ordering it (I think that's wrong).
db
|
1764.11 | Caveat emptor (a slight digression) | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Tue Nov 15 1988 17:34 | 5 |
| If it was Atlanta and you got ripped off, it was either at Americana or
at Rhythm City. I wouldn't feel the least bit bad about burning their
time and then buying mail-order.
-b
|
1764.12 | SET MODE/MORALIST | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Wed Nov 16 1988 09:39 | 28 |
| It was Rhythm City. Note that they sorta "tried" to rip me off,
but didn't really succeed. I think I paid about what most stores
are selling it for.
Also understand that it was the manager who tried to rip me off, not
the salesman, who seemed like a decent guy.
I'm also pretty moralistic about demoing at local stores with the
intention only to buy mail-order. That gives MO a tremendous unfair
advantage.
And in most cases totally unnecessary. Most of the
major chains (certainly Daddy's, EU's and LaSalles) will match
a bonafide MO price anyway, and you get the advantages of having
bought it from a local store (which I consider to be a significant
advantage) and you also find that once you've made a big purchase
at a local store, they treat like a celebrity when you walk in
the next time.
Some people just are afriad to haggle a little over price. I'm not.
When I see someone say "Daddy's is selling it for $xxx " where xxx is
the asking price, I cringe because I know with only the slightest
amoung of bargaining, they'll sell it for a lot less.
Of course, in NH it would've been tax-free but Daddy's doesn't carry
VC for the [E]SQ.
db
|
1764.13 | Perhaps I have a bit of personal stake in this. | DYO780::SCHAFER | Brad - back in Ohio. | Thu Nov 17 1988 09:41 | 13 |
| The "manager" is the owner of both aforementioned stores (George
Luther). My friends at ProFound (Bruce and Shane) used to work for him
until he blackballed them ... they couldn't get a job at any store
within a 4 or 5 state area for almost a year, thanks to good old
George. What a scumbag. (And yes, the salesmen there are very nice
guys - bought my ESQ-Ms from Mark.)
Morality or not, I don't feel bad about not giving my money to a cheat,
even if he does provide a convenience.
End of the rathole.
-b
|
1764.14 | What's your definition of "cheating" | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Nov 17 1988 10:28 | 15 |
| > I don't feel bad about not giving my money to a cheat
One last word on the rathole:
Is it not also "cheating" to go into a store, presenting
yourself as a potential buyer, taking up their time and resources,
and yet having no intention of buying there?
Is not that also "cheating" the people who buy there and thus
end up absorbing the costs of the MO order buyers?
We should have a "philosophical problems of MUSIC" conference were
we can talk about MUSIC "related" philosophical issues like this,
scalping, bootlegging, copyrights, etc. I don't deny that it's
off the topic, but the discussions could be very interesting.
|
1764.15 | well.............. | MUDDIN::DEBARROS | | Thu Nov 17 1988 15:15 | 13 |
|
I tried programming the SAX2, SAX3, SAX4 patch in Novembers
issue of the Hacker. SAX2 is split with SAX3 and layered with SAX4.
Of course each patch reside on different octaves of the scale, but
the only major diff between them is SAX4 has a funny bell ring to
it. Anyway, the combined effort, SAX2 needs a lot of tweeking.
It doesnt sound close to a realistic sax, and I have heard some
pretty close sounding sax patches in some music produced by LA face
Pro. I know it isnt midi'ed sax by the way it is played. Not unless
it is some pretty good sampling!
Jr. hacker
|
1764.16 | Tweak tweak tweak... | WEFXEM::COTE | Sing with the clams, knave! | Thu Nov 17 1988 15:25 | 7 |
| Sax patches often sound poor when played statically. Bitch bend,
AT, velo and BC (where applicable) can make all the difference
in the world with a sax patch. So can FX...
...course, I s'pose the patch could really be poor.
Edd
|
1764.17 | Ensoniq Rep at Daddy's tonite | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Thu Nov 17 1988 16:16 | 12 |
| This is late notice, but there is gonna be an Ensoniq Rep at
Daddy's in Nashua from 5-8pm tonite.
I'm gonna see if I can steal some patches and demos. I really
love demos. I use them to show my stuff off to friends. It's
like saying "see, you can do incredible stuff with this junk,
even if *I* can't".
Getting back to the topic, demos also have the property that
you can hear a patch in the context for which it's intended.
db
|
1764.18 | Ocean Waves | MUDDIN::DEBARROS | | Thu Mar 09 1989 11:36 | 8 |
|
I'm looking for a Ocean Wave patch.. should be pretty easy to program,
I tried. Close but no cigar. Nothing like the MKS-30 wave. Does
anyone have it handy.?
Eric
|
1764.19 | I got one - will try to remember to write it out | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Aerobocop | Thu Mar 09 1989 14:04 | 32 |
| I have a patch with ocean waves and segul calls. Some of you may
have heard it at Falljam 88. I think its really good.
If you don't want the seguls you can turn them off pretty easily by
turning off certain oscillators.
Actually there's an interesting story about this patch.
The fantastic singer in my falljam band (Tallis) was a Lourdes.
After Falljam, she called and asked me to rush a tape of our
set to her cause she wanted her other keyboard player to learn
some of the parts I played.
Well, I went to her next concert. Have to confess to getting
a real kick hearing someone else playing the parts and solos
you created. I've never been "copped" before and probably never
will again.
Her other keyboard player is one of Kurzweil's principle sound
designers for the 1000 series. Turns out Lourdes talked him
into designing a waves and gulls patch for the K-1000 so that
it could be used at this concert.
I talked with the guy for awhile (really SUPER guy) about various
things (including stuff like "got any job openings there?") and
I think this patch might be on some future update for Kurzweil.
So if it does, I want all of you Kurzy owners to know that I had
some (very) small part in that patch being there.
db
|
1764.20 | !@#$%^&*() | MUDDIN::DEBARROS | | Fri May 12 1989 17:23 | 14 |
| Gee Wilikers...
When is someone going to design some SQ80 patches using the machines
full capabilities? Is it to much to ask for a library of Piano's and
Bass?
I purchased the Mescal Music patches advertised to be designed
especially for the SQ. Out of 40 patches maybe 10 were useful.
It must be time to stop creating the original tunes for a while and
get into some heavy patch making!
ED
|
1764.21 | Sometimes it's "use" isn't evident | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Fri May 12 1989 17:45 | 20 |
| Ed,
There are some slimey people in the 3rd-party patch software market
who throw out garbage.
But if you perceive 1/4th to be "useful" you're doing REAL well
in my experience.
I think part of it, is that you have to hear the patches used in
the kind of context they are intended for.
Take for example, the factory patches. I would think most of them
were "useless" too unless you sorta dissect the demos they come with
and see how some of the more odd patches are used.
There's a trend in this market to provide demos with patches (which is
particularly easy to do on Ensoniq machines cause almost all Ensoniq
stuff have builtin sequencers). Let's hope this trend continues.
db
|
1764.22 | Its not if U win but how U play.... | MUDDIN::DEBARROS | | Tue May 16 1989 10:41 | 19 |
| Though this is my first time purchasing 3rd party patches... I can
say that I'm happy with what I got. When venders announce new
products, your first time hearing the patches totaly amazes the ear!
After you buy the unit, it only takes a few months for the patches to
sound like your same ole dry sounding AVERAGE patches. Like the
Korg M1.... first hearing it (with its 24 note layering abilities) was
beyond incredible. Now when I go to the music stores and tinker around
with it, it sounds like any other synth.
I did find that some patches on my TX81Z layer very well with some
of those off the wall patches from Mescal Music. I took 1 patch and
duplicated it in a few different forms of a basic EP, Brass, Jazz
Guitar and each one of these works well by itself but works excellent
with selected patchs and performances on the TX81Z. In this respect
I am happy with the purchase. Not that the patches were all that
great, but they lifted my imagination of what I wanted to hear in a
patch up 3 levels.
ED
|
1764.23 | Valhala Patch Library For ESQ-1 and SQ-80 | AQUA::ROST | Everyone loves those dead presidents | Thu Jan 11 1990 07:24 | 56 |
|
This is a review of the audio demo tape available from Valhala. They
have a package of 757 patches, available in a couple of different
formats (see below). A list of the patches is available for free,
while the demo tape is $3 postpaid. You really need the tape as the
patch names really don't help much. As usual, a lot of the ones that
have cool names are duff sounds.
The tape is arranged in groups of 20 patches. A voice over before each
group keeps you oriented. There are actually 758 (??) patches on the
tape, plus an additional 80 percussion sounds which are available on a
ROM. All patches are really ESQ-1 patches, they do not take advantage
of the 80's extra waveforms. The patches are laid out randomly,
although often two or more similarly named patches are adjacent. With
only six characters, names get confusing. CLAV 1 and CLAV-1, for
instance. Each patch is played for a second or two (sometimes with
trademark phrases to catch your ear; I heard "Jump", "Whiter Shade of
Pale", "Joy to the World", "When You See A Chance" and some Billy Joel
tune quoted).
Out of 757 patches, I found 60 that I liked enough to mark on the
sheet. Most of these were the sort of fat, analogish sounds that the
Ensoniq does well. In particular, a group of patches called
SYMPY1-SYMPY9 were nice, large symphonic ensembles, great for pads.
There are two trombones which are lousy bone emulations but excellent
big brass-like blasts. On pianos, there is a series of ACGRD1-ACGRD9,
but of these, #1 is the most realistic, the others get more electronic
(processed) sounding. OLDGRD is a fantastic honky-tonk sound. It
sounds like the "detuned" effect makes it easier to fool your ears.
Also two Rhodes that I liked, and quite a few FM tine pianos which were
well done (I hate that sound, though). There were also three excellent
B3-with-Leslie patches in there, along with the usual grabbag of pipe
organ variations. In percussion-type things, there is a nice log drum,
good congas, nice steel drums. The separate 80 voice percussion
patches sounded pretty synthetic and since you could do better with the
SQ-80's percussion waveforms, I skipped listening to all of them. One
caveat on the tape (since the ESQs are noted for digital grunge on some
sounds) is that a few patches had broke up (distorted) when auditioned
through headphones. These tended to be bell-like ones, so it may be
just a poor recording, but there were only a few of these and I was not
interested that much in those sounds, anyway.
Here's the formats: Book of 757 patch sheets is $25, all 757 patches
loaded onto an SQ-80 disk is $75, then there are ROM sets (not EE)
which are listed on the back of the patch sheet which contain various
subsets of the 757. There are four 80 voice ROMs, $25 each, two 160
voice ROMs (each duplicates two of the 80 voice ones) for $52 each
(hmm, it's $2 cheaper to buy the 80s!!!) or two 320 voice ROMs which do
*not* correspond directly to the 80 voice ones, at $99 each. The 80
percussion voices are available on ROM only for $30. The demo tape is
$3, postpaid, patch listing free with SASE. $3.50 S&H. Phone orders
800-648-6434, ext 501. Info, 313-548-9360. Mail is:
Valhala
Box 20157
Ferndale, MI 48220
|
1764.24 | Voice Crystal Disks VC1, VC2 | AQUA::ROST | Everyone loves those dead presidents | Thu Feb 08 1990 10:53 | 41 |
|
I got copies of the two Voice Crystal disks for the SQ-80 the other
day. Unlike some companies, the Eye and I/VC people pay attention to
packaging, so the initial impression in getting a blister packed
diskette with a silk-screened label is "These guys are on the ball".
The patches pretty much back that up.
Both disks have two 40 patch banks. Each bank also has one or more
associated demo sequences. The patch types are distributed randomly.
Each bank has some pianos, organs, strings, horns, etc. but only the
first disk has an acoustic piano, for example.
Disk VC1 has the acoustic piano (nice variation on the factory piano),
a tack piano with a good percussive attack and two absolute dog
patches, a dobro and SHOBUD, a pedal steel guitar. These two are set
up to demonstrate poly-aftertouch for bending notes in chords (check
out the awful demo sequence "C&W"). OK, it works, but they are poor
recreation sof the real thing.
Disk VC2 has a very realistic accordion called PARIS and a decent
classical guitar (OK, don't sell your sampler for this one) plus some
nice atmospheric and electronic sounding pads which are showcased in
one of the demos. No acoustic piano on this disk.
There is zero documentation with these. A cardboard backing sheet in
the blister pack lists the patch names, that's it.
My copy of VC1 arrived with a defect. I had to do multiple reads of
the first patch bank before it would read without errors. I immediately
backed it up, of course. I called Eye and I and they will replace the
disk at no charge; I have to pay return post, they will ship back
second day air. They said they will provide backups to identified
purchasers indefinitely. That seems decent service to me.
These disks are being discontinued. Until the end of March, the price
has been lowered to $20 per disk, plus $3 per order for shipping. The
ESQ-1 Voice Crystals are available also at $40 per 80 patch cart (3
volumes) or $7 per 40 patch tape (6 volumes). Phone for orders and
service is 408-945-0139.
Brian
|
1764.25 | Voice Crystal Service Comes Through | AQUA::ROST | Bikini Girls With Machine Guns | Tue Mar 06 1990 08:51 | 11 |
|
Re: .24
Just a followup on Voice Crystal. I mentioned that one disk was
defective, but managed to get one good read of it, which was enough to
do a backup. I returned the disk to them (my cost $1.50 for postage,
plus aggravation) they returned a new (and good) disk to me. It did
take about three weeks to do the swap, though. I'm satisfied with the
service. Plus the patches are decent, too 8^) 8^) 8^)
Brian
|
1764.26 | Maartists EEPROM Cart With Patches | AQUA::ROST | Bikini Girls With Machine Guns | Mon Mar 26 1990 12:12 | 48 |
|
I received a 160-voice EEPROM cart from Maartists over the weekend.
Maartists is primarily in the memory business, they sell carts for lots
of machines (CZ, DX, D-50, K1, etc.) as well as memory expander boards,
etc. The carts come loaded with patches, but they are almost an
afterthought. Maartists uses patches from an outside developer, I
think PatchWorks from NYC.
The cart is a typical 2-bank cart, a small slide switch lets you kick
between the two 80 voice banks. The documentation exists solely of
instructions on how to insert the cart and operate the slide switch.
No information is given on the patches, not even a patch listing.
I fired up the first patch and was quite impressed. Then I started
wondering why it sounded so good and checked the split/layer menu and
sure enough, it was layered. A good portion of the patches in here are
layered, and there are a few splits. Maartists does *not* use the
convention Ensoniq recommends in the manuals to differentiate layered
and split patches by name. I found two splits that were split to
patches in the *internal* bank, ooh, bad move! How could the developer
possibly know what patch is in that bank?
The other big zit is the patch names are not too descriptive. There
are dozens of patches with names like SYNxx, or ORGxx, which makes it
hard to differentiate between them when looking for a certain sound.
Others have names that may have meant something to the developer but
not to me.
Without performance notes, you have to spend some time playing with
velocity and the wheels to see how these patches respond. I found a
few where the wheel allowed real-time filter control and one where the
wheel modulated a very slow LFO which detuned the oscillators...adjusting
the wheel essentially allowed real-time detuning, cool effect. The
best patches were in the B part of the second bank, a number of SYNxx
patches which were very electronic sounding, in the vein of early
seventies analog sounds. Of course, there's plenty of pianos, organs,
strings, brass, sound effects, mini-moogs, etc., just as in most patch
collections (so how come noone makes really *specialized* patch sets,
anyway?).
I basically bought the cart because I needed a cart, and the price
vs. patch storage was the best I could find. The fact that out of the
supplied patches, I get a handful of decent sounds is just gravy. For
those interested primarily in the *patches* I would say that the other
third-party stuff I've purchased was superior overall.
Brian
|