From: Emiliano G. <emi...@po...> - 2004-05-06 13:02:47
|
gioved=EC, 06 maggio 2004 alle 12:37:16, Robert Jonsson ha scritto: > > Which ones? > > Can you point me to an URL? > > > It seems I was mistaking. I thought about rhythm patterns. > For this there are: > http://gmorgan.sourceforge.net/ > http://www.kootenay.com/~bvdpoel/mma/mma.html Yes, I know these but they are arrangers... I mean something where you ca= n define the "groove" of your quantisation (eg slightly shift the 3rd beat ahead and so on) - I think cubase calls that "DNA grooves" or something l= ike this... Think of a "programmable humanization mask" :) Of course, it would be great also to save these templates, to build a library that should be shipped with the program. I would love to have various types of swing, shuffles, waltz, etc... to try on my sequences.=20 Most of the MIDI editing is concerning the positions of the notes, and so having more functions to vary the position (in a musical way) for me woul= d be a big plus. A more advanced improvement can be adding to these templat= es a "random factor" (eg define an horizontal range in which the note can fa= ll) The same method can be applied to other parameters, such as velocity or controllers, but for a start, just being able to control the position of the notes in a programmable/editable way is a must for a sequencer IMHO, because fixed quantisation is useful, but only for certain musical genres... and the only way to give an human feel to a MIDI track, for now is to edit in a note-by-note basis, which you have to admit, is not so comfortable ;) > /Robert Cheers, --=20 Emiliano Grilli Linux user #209089=20 http://www.emillo.net |