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Steelio

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Posts posted by Steelio

  1. The one thing that will never get better is how windows handles audio latency. It's a consequence of different hardware and drivers interacting.

     

    If you use ASIO drivers they bypass most of the Windows kernel and stream directly to the 'hardware' interface. If you have a decent audio interface, the latency wouldn't be noticeably worse just 'because its Windows'. Most latency measurements I've seen (and I've seen my share) don't show any real difference between MacOS and Windows (using ASIO drivers) when using the same audio device.

     

    On Macbooks (ime) the graphical redraw performance is significantly worse than on Windows machines. Meaning more general CPU load and increased spikes in CPU usage when lots of redrawing is occurring (for example when lots of audio meters are firing on channel strips), which can cause audio glitching as a consequence. So generally I associate poorer performance with Macbooks, all else being equal. Everything about the Macbook hardware is much better quality than the equivalent hardware from manufacturers who are bundling Windows with their laptops, though. Apart from the lack of any upgradeability on the recent MB models, that kinda sucks.

  2. 7th gen i5 or better, 8gb DDR4 RAM or better, SSD. I doubt you need hyperthreading, I doubt you need anything but on board GFX (GFX cards can induce DPC latency events). You probably do want 4 cores or better, especially if you use lots of vsts. You probably want to dump extra cash into buying a good audio device if you don't already have one, as that will minimise latency and buffer underruns.

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  3. I don't understand why anyone would think it would ever have mass appeal. It's like asking why albums of bagpipe playing aren't as popular as Justin Bieber.

     

    Exactly this. The same could be said about someone button mashing on an MPC for 5 mins. Or 5 hour super-technical saxophone solos. The kind of things most people will watch for 30 seconds and say "Wow, that's good." but they'd never listen to it in their headphones. You can use turntables in the studio to play a sample on your latest pop hit and get away with it, I don't see how its any different to a regular sampler in that respect, but 'turntablism' and long 'aaah' solos are never going to be anything more than a niche.

  4. John Beez did an interesting video where he's cutting some g-funk tone with the c1 and that wacky fader tuner thing - which is probably the most listenable thing I've heard come out of the c1. That's mainly just because I like the beat he's cutting over. I never really liked tone routines. I didn't like them when 8-ball used to do them and I've never heard one since that made me change my mind. Isn't the C1 about 6 years old now anyway? And still I've never seen anything I thought was really good or innovative come out of it.

  5. isn't a drill the one where you put one finger on the record and tense your forearm until your finger shakes the record really fast?

     

    i've never heard of a jackhammer, but i'm not sure it's possible to do a drill + OG flare, you'd need to be pretty fast to get all the clicks in.

     

    what's ttm?

     

    what's a fast bay x2?

     

    if you do a baby scratch without a second back, wouldn't you keep moving forward until you knock the tonearm off the record?

  6. steelio, some music nerds, mostly old old folks will actually tell that the piece is in Am. if the first note begins in A or the dominate note is A, and the piece is shallow and not bright, it's minor. put the 2 together and its A minor. you can also play a Am chord on a piano and/or guitar and people will know the chord was an A minor.

     

    i was a student of music theory I and music theory II in college and can determine that also. the key signature, and recognizing them was part of the music theory experience. mentioned already learning scales such as pentatonic, diatonic, major, minor blah blah scales definitely helps if your composing with instruments. but if you just use loops, you don't need to know scales. scales are definitely good for guitar solos or just melody writing, but music can take it further.

     

     

    Okay, I basically know nothing about music theory, but I was assuming that music theory meant just actually writing and reading music. I didn't know they did the ear training stuff aswell. I always thought that was a separate skill that people who had played instruments for a long time would have. Anyone who can just sit and listen to something and instantly recognise the key signature and can improvise along to it gets respect from me.

     

    some very smart samplist will actually sample the tune and shift the sample to another key signature and get away with it. thats when perfect pitch and sampling goes great together. some will even sample a piano motif or riff and write it down on music paper. theyll then play the sample on their beat backwards note for note, or even turn the music stave upside down and play it that way.

     

    Yeah, even I do this when I'm sampling, record some stuff and speed it up or slow it down or whatever so it sounds like it's in a different pitch. Or chop each note up and play it in a different order until I make some new little tune out of it. Then try and mix it with other samples so they blend in. There's a few old school hiphop records where you can hear the horns and stuff clashing when they've been mixed over the top of the beat, but they always seem to flip it about so it sounds good or do some tricks when they mix it down so it blends in. I know shit about music theory or reading music but I can still hear when things clash and sound off key, even though I couldn't tell you what key or note it was playing. I just usually just go with whatever I think sounds good.

  7. Even if you know everything about music theory you still won't be able to just listen to something and say 'Oh that's in Am' or whatever. You'd need to train your ears to do that. Which takes years of playing an instrument, or apparently there are 'perfect pitch' courses you can do. For sampling you just need to know what sounds good to you and go with it. Tons of Hip Hop songs have elements that are out of tune slightly, but they still make it work. Sometimes the off key stuff can sound good, it's just about experimenting with it.

  8. Right now I have a Korg MS-20, but I eventually plan on getting an ARP Odyssey, a Sequential Circuits Prophet-5, and some other analog poly synth, I'm thinking of a Yamaha CS-50 or a Roland Jupiter-6 at the moment.

     

    Wow, nice stuff man! Where you get the MS-20? Ebay? About the M-Audio ting, I've never had a problem with them, although the usb drivers for the trigger finger were a bit gash. Never had a problem with the soundcards though (I've owned a 24/96 and a delta 10/10). Motu gear is supposed to be good, I've never used an 896 but I have used an 828 and it worked fine. They are quite pricey though.

     

    Yeah the Macbooks look good, I wouldn't mind picking one up myself. My computer is literally on it's last legs. I think its burned out about 84 power supply's since I've had it.

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