Support |
There was an instrument in the 70's called the Birotron that was developed in association with Rick Wakeman as a next generation Mellotron. <http://www.8trackheaven.com/birotron.html> While the Mellotron's notes came from pre-recorded strips of 1/4" tape, the birotron actually used 8-track cartridges. When you played the keyboard, whatever was on the cartridges would sound. The problem was, Mellotron tapes contained the note's attack portion, and the Birotron's cartridges were endless loops in which a keyed note would start abruptly. There's a story (perhaps apocryphal, but who knows?) about a practical joke the members of Yes played on Wakeman at a rehearsal; after a dinner break, Wakeman was late in returning (he was notoriously 'thirsty' in those days) and the band members brought in a bunch of 8-tracks from their cars. When they were playing again after Wakeman returned and they got to the part where the Birotron was supposed to produce the sounds of choirs or strings or whatever, Wakeman hit the keys and heard Simon & Garfunkel. I've used MiniDisc decks as (non-real-time) loopers; since they're random access, if you edit a sample so there's no glitch at the seam, and set the deck to Repeat One, it'll loop without a gap. If you set up several decks with a mixer, you can play the faders like a keyboard. Unfortunately, I used Sony decks which have extremely fragile loading mechanisms, and Sony doesn't really like to honor their warranty. I've done similar things with CD players and/or cassette decks loaded with endless loop tapes, but MiniDisc works better, at least until the little plastic gears eat themselves. -t- --- Kris Day <commencement13@hotmail.com> wrote: Does anyone know of a way to controll car stereo tape decks or any tape decks for that matter through like a joystick or keyboard maybe even in a theremin like instrument? __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. http://mailplus.yahoo.com