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#118392 - 09/15/06 09:51 PM
Re: Guitar arranger?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
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I'm afraid that accurate MIDI guitar tracking relies entirely on getting a good, clean, single note for the electronics to figure out. As such, I doubt very much that it is in any way possible to track a 12-string (at least without a LOT of 'glitches').
I'm afraid your father will have to bite the bullet and move down to a 6-string, and, in all fairness, anyone who has ever played a MIDI-fied guitar will tell you how clean and accurate your playing has to be to avoid a lot of 'glitch' and wrong notes coming out. In the context of simple sound replacement, the occasional glitch isn't too big of a problem, but to trigger an arranger accurately? The arranger doesn't know if a note is a glitch or the real thing, and is likely to produce unwanted chords if he is not careful.
His mileage may vary, and a lot depends on how well, and cleanly he plays in the first place, but if I were him, I would want to try one extensively, first, before he bought anything.
For simple backing generation, it might be easier to just play an arranger, use the sequencer (or find an older Roland with the Chord Sequencer function) to memorize the chords, and then play guitar on top of it....... but if he needs realtime transcription of his guitar playing, it's going to be a challenge.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#118394 - 09/16/06 01:40 AM
Re: Guitar arranger?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
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Something else he might try is to have an arranger, and hook MIDI bass pedals into it, then use them in One-Finger mode (so two notes - or feet! - can create most chords he needs). Kind of like what he was doing with his headstock, except with his feet.
Maybe an older Roland RA-90 (or similar) module if he doesn't want to lug around a keyboard and a set of PK-5 bass pedals. Just make sure they are polyphonic, not monophonic pedal triggers. Alternatively, if it is polyphonic (I'm not sure, right now), Roland make a Midi foot controller, the FC200, that can send midi notes. Maybe that is cheaper.....?
Or, even more off the wall, I once saw a OMB guitarist using a set of bass pedals (custom made, probably) that was all buttons, laid out in a grid just like a bass guitar's neck, so hand's and feet were doing essentially the same thing. Very clever......
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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