T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2525.1 | What's the hoopla about??? | DCSVAX::COTE | Can't touch this... | Mon Dec 17 1990 13:21 | 5 |
| Unless all the sounds are available via MIDI (as opposed to the HR-16)
I don't see any advantage to the machine. Indeed, it only has 8 pads
vs. 16 on the HR series...
Edd
|
2525.2 | more clues | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Brahms Berman Requiem? | Mon Dec 17 1990 13:28 | 7 |
| Hmmm,
I heard things like "stereo samples blah blah blah" "more sounds
blah blah blah". I played with it, and was HIGHLY impressed with the
sound.
dp
|
2525.3 | | DCSVAX::COTE | Can't touch this... | Mon Dec 17 1990 13:44 | 10 |
| Rathole alert!!
> "stereo samples"...
I consider a drum to be a point source. Frankly, from a distance all
instruments are point sources.
What's the advantage to a stereo sample?
Edd
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2525.4 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | Mistake! I dod that on porpoise! | Mon Dec 17 1990 14:31 | 5 |
| It has 299 16-bit stereo samples, plus the review I read said they were
impressed with the sequencer.
matty
|
2525.5 | ! | WEFXEM::COTE | Can't touch this... | Tue Dec 18 1990 08:31 | 4 |
| Well, having 299 samples is certainly an advantage. I'd pay $60 for a
6X increase any day...
Edd
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2525.6 | ... | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Brahms Berman Requiem? | Tue Dec 18 1990 10:27 | 7 |
| So would I. That settles it. I'm calling SA, and ordering it. I agree
with you, Edd, stereo drum samples are of questionable merit for the
work I do. The large pallate of sounds to draw from, however, is a
great selling feature. $359 ain't a bad price either. DJM wants $400 no
haggle.
dp
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2525.7 | | KEYS::MOELLER | she had teeth like billowing fire | Tue Dec 18 1990 13:07 | 12 |
| Way, way back in the early 1000's (topic-number-wise) I started a topic
challenging the concept of stereo samples. With the exception of a
pipe organ, I'm hard put to think of an instrument with multiple sound
sources that would benefit from true stereo sampling.
Now, taking point samples and placing them via software parameters
somewhere in the left-right spectrum makes perfect sense.. but spending
memory and DAC speed reproducing stereo samples makes NO sense to me.
Of course, I haven't lived with a stereo sampler ! Rebuttals ??
karl
|
2525.8 | MTBF? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Tue Dec 18 1990 13:51 | 25 |
| Where's the machine been reviewed - I've only seen an ad. The ad was
worded ambiguously and could have been (cynically) interpreted as
meaning that the number of samples and the number of preset patterns
totalled 299. The ad also said only 120 sounds were simultaneously
MIDI accessible (admittedly, better than the R-8M's limit of 88, though
they can be selected from among 146).
Does it take alternative sound cards? Can the sounds be edited in any
way (e.g., at least pitch)? Anything analogous to the R-8's
performance sections? Any more than a stereo output?
Regarding the stereo issue, no real musical instrument is a point
source. Drums radiate over a substantial spatial area (e.g., a snare
drum head is 14" in diameter, and shells are at least 5" deep, tom tom
shells can be 14" to 16" deep. Cymbals are 20" to 24" in diameter.)
Whether stereo sampling substantially improves the imaging is
debateable, but I would not make that argument based on the "point
source" notion. In my own experience, the most obvious demonstration of
the inadequacy of panned point sources is to listen to such a recording
through headphones and compare it to an "ambient" stereo mic'ed
recording of a whole kit. The imaging difference is dramatic. One can
argue which is better or more accurate, but the difference is real.
len.
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2525.9 | Stereo Samples | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | open mouth, insert action item | Tue Dec 18 1990 14:46 | 17 |
|
Karl,
Interesting, the EMAX can't do stereo samples? The EPS can, after
a fashion. It is, to my tastes, quite wasteful of memory. I have
a couple of stereo samples, most notably a grand piano sample which
is pretty good. But it's huge (900 blocks, or about 1/2 meg), and
I don't need to use stereo that often (and besides, it messes up if
I patch out to a mono solo out). The biggest problem is that they are
a pain to make, even with sample editing tools.
Of course, of the SR16 has done all of that for you, then it's a moot
point. But I would think that mucking with the pans on stereo samples
doesn't do much for the "stereo"...
/pjh
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2525.10 | | DOPEY::DICKENS | What are you pretending not to know ? | Tue Dec 18 1990 15:23 | 3 |
| A stereo sample could have a stereo artificial ambiance or other effect added to
it. If the SR-16 is anything like the HR-16B it probably has lots of those.
|
2525.11 | ... | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Brahms Berman Requiem? | Tue Dec 18 1990 16:12 | 11 |
| Len brings up an interesting point. Re the magic 299 number: Is that a
combination of patters and sounds or is that just sounds. Preset
patters are all but useless to me.
No ROM cartridges. That I know for certain.
I assume (ha!) that you can tune the samples just like you can with the
HR-16. I could, or course, be wrong.
dp (Agamemnon! I'm listening to Elektra while writing this.)
|
2525.12 | | KEYS::MOELLER | she had teeth like billowing fire | Tue Dec 18 1990 17:36 | 7 |
| re .9, paul, EMAX II allegedly handles EIII stereo samples.
I've heard the "stereo samples got builtin ambience" argument before..
I already HAVE outboard FX processors that *I* can apply to taste. If
you got builtin ambience, good luck getting rid of it.
karl
|
2525.13 | Higher Hats | WOTVAX::KENT | | Wed Dec 19 1990 08:24 | 34 |
|
The aforementioned toy was reviewed in U.K. Sound on Sound Magazine
this month. Much of the above conjecture is correct. Bear in mind this
is a growing market place and the people like Alesis(SP?) are trying to
attract the first time buyers as much as you hardened PFP hagglers.
Stereo is ambient treatment of the signals. But to cancel Karls
argument they also add Dry treatments of some iof the sounds. Could be
useful if you don't want to tie up an FX box. (Or haven't benn able to
afford one yet.
299 sounds but 100 and something available in "Expander" mode.
Something akin to the R8's cross-fade approach to the sound based on
velocity.
Interesting performance mode whereby you can record a pattern plus an
alternative plus a couple of fills. and by hitting a pedal during play
it will produce a fill and then swing into the alternative pattern.
Plus one or a alternatives to this sequence depending on your
requirement.
I haven't heard the machine but the review was quite complementary.
I think they will sell quite a few.
I don't need one.
Did I offend any laws, copywrites, people etc.. with the above?
Paul.
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2525.14 | .. | FULCRM::PICKETT | David - Brahms Berman Requiem? | Wed Dec 19 1990 10:08 | 5 |
| re -.1
Dunno, Paul, we'll have to run it by the folks in legal... ;^)
dp
|
2525.15 | | IGETIT::BROWNM | Mistake! I dod that on porpoise! | Wed Dec 19 1990 13:03 | 21 |
| I made a mistake. I checked last night with the review Paul refered
to. It has only 233 sounds, of which (as Paul said) some are just dry
sounds of other sounds included in the 233.
The sequencer stores something like 50 patterns at once, with each
pattern being split into 2 and each split having it's own fill, ie;
A1, A2, B1, B2. When linking sequences you could be on Pattern A, so
then you could press for Pattern B and it would automatically put Fill
A2 into action before going to B1 and visa versa from B to A.
You can only assign 9 of the sounds per pattern, but you can still have
50 patterns, each with their own drum kit, running at alternating
tempo's each with the 4 sub-patterns.
I'll bring the rag in tomorrow. Basically the summary said the only
negative points were that it did not have a ROM port, and that the
pads could be bigger.
matty
|
2525.16 | # of sounds via MIDI | MSDSWS::DROBERT | servicing the fields of TENNESSEE | Tue Apr 23 1991 19:23 | 7 |
| Regarding the number of sounds simultaneously availble via MIDI, I read
an article in Alesis' user group mag 'The First Reflection' written by
Craig Anderton which said that a D40-49(?) mode must be selected which
makes drum kits 40-49 (12 sounds per kit) accessible at one time.
Otherwise, program changes must be used to switch drum kits. I've got
one on order here in Tennessee ($330 plus tax) and should be getting
it soon. Will review it here if anyone is interested.
|
2525.17 | is it really good? | CX3PST::WSC058::R_RICHARDSON | Rich | Fri Jul 12 1991 18:49 | 6 |
| re -1
I'm about to get into an electronic kit. My cousin is a dealer in the
midwest and said he's sold a bunch of them all happy customers. Do you
(or anyone else) agree or disagree?
Rich CSC/CS 592-2795
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2525.18 | SR16 vs. HR16 MIDI | CITYFS::SM | Not now, I'm eating my lunch!!! | Sat Jul 20 1991 22:59 | 10 |
|
Does the SR16 listen to controller info like pan, volume?
Can we change pitch, sound etc via midi?
SM
|
2525.19 | Bit more SR16 info | MSDSWS::DROBERT | servicing the fields of TENNESSEE | Thu Dec 26 1991 15:35 | 14 |
| Sorry, I've been offline a few months... re:.-2 I'm very happy with the
sounds (233 of them). Re:.-1 you cannot change via MIDI pan, volume, or
tuning - only program change (drum kits). There is a mode which can
give you access to 120 sounds (each a different MIDI note #) without
resorting to program change. Internally, there are 7 pan positions, and
6 degrees of tuning. Volume is adjustable from 0-99. My main complaint
is with the size of the 12 pads - too small and a bit stiff. But other
features make up. Fifty patterns (four subpatterns each - A, B, A fill,
and B fill - really makes for 200 patterns); 3 velocity curves and 8(?)
fixed velocity responses; quanitization with or without swing select.
Overall, I've not regretted spending the $330.00 for one minute.
Dave Robert (MSDSWS::DROBERT)
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