Support |
Me too. Before I I wanted to use my drum machine as a carrier for a vocoder, it involved a bunch of reconfiguring of a very complex set up. 9 out of 10 times I'd think of something and realize the work I had to do to move things around and repatch everything and I'd give up. If a cool idea took nearly an evening to set up and get working right, and there are not many evenings I could spend doing music in the first place, you have to make sacrifices. Sometimes I'd buy duplicates of gear for dedicated processing just to get more flexibility. Now, I don't make those sacrifices. Oh, and that vocoder? When I bought the hardware one it was a single entity. Now it can be as many as my processor allows. Same with all the synths and effects. A configuration that would take all night to set up and thousands of dollars to duplicate now happen in minutes. Yeah, some degree of tactile response has been lost and that's a shame. Novation and Automap have done a lot in the way of making the software world better, but it's not perfect. I imagine at some point things like the Jazz Mutant Lemur will be inexpensive enough to become commonplace and then it's game over: Computers win. Even now, I'm so used to programming effects and synth software with a mouse that the only time I need "control" is via floor pedals (2 Behringer FCB1010s and a IK Multimedia Stealthpedal do the trick) I'm an instrumentalist, not really a knob tweaker. On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Michael Peters <mp@mpeters.de> wrote: >> the rack is really heavy and i'm not getting any younger.... > > hi Sim, > > these is the main reason why I ditched my rack and replaced everything >with > software (I'm using Bidule too but on a Windows laptop). You probably >won't > be able to recreate everything exactly as it was but then, you'll be >finding > many new exciting possibilities. I'm very happy with this and still > experimenting ... and contrary to what Andy says, all these new > possibilities sparked my musical imagination big time. > > -Michael