Originally posted by BEBOP:
It really brightens up my morning and is giving me a positive look at this new day.
Bebop, you saying this, has certainly made, my day today, brighter as well. Thanks.
Originally posted by loungelyzard:
I especially like your doing it live, and hearing how "live" can be true to how your mood is at this recorded moment . . .
and only having a very minor glitch or two, that most would never notice.
Pose, good point, for it's exactly what you said that I feel is the essense of music making, and what I want to capture in my arranger keyboard/vocal recordings. Though I wish everything could be perfect, I'm learning to accept the fact that minor glitches cannot realistically be fully eliminated in live performance recording. Specifically with "Come Running", I acknowledge the registration change glitch heard which clipped my vocals at one point, as well as an auto accomp chord change delay in the instrumental solo, but decided to tolerate these, in exchange for the other parts of the song performance that I was very satisfied with.
Originally posted by kbrkr:
One of my favorite voices on the t2 is the Pedal Steel guitar.
I Concur. Btw: Here's how I assigned the RT Voices (layered) for playing Pedal Steel.
Rt1: SA Pedal Steel, panned far left (efx setting 1)
Rt2: SA Pedal Steel, panned far right (efx efx setting 2)
Rt3: Aloha Guitar, panned 3/4
Pitchbend (lowest note in a chord only) for SA Pedal triggered via footpedal, and pitchbend (any notes played) for Aloha Gtr triggered via key touch. I find the combination of these triggering techniques and the hard panning left/right of Super Articulation voices helps to add even more sound realism.
Originally posted by Bob Hendershot:
I think this is your best so far
Hi Bob, Hearing you say this is especially appreciated, because I hope to grow and continue to improve musicially, and be able to say (a year from now) that the music I'm producing in the future, is better than what I'm producing now as well.
Many thanks to everyone for sharing their thoughts.
Scott