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#234201 - 05/13/08 08:14 AM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/02
Posts: 5520
Loc: Port Charlotte,FL,USA
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I mix in some of the better SMF files when singing, and playing over them. One reason I bought the Roland G70, was for it's excellent handling of midi.
Before that, I used to use my lap top with an Echo sound card, and Notation Composer(MidiNotate). I would arrange the file as a lead sheet with chords, mute the parts I played, and read right off the laptop.
Both ways have advantages and drawbacks. I think a mixture adds interest.
Bernie
_________________________
pa4X 76 ,SX900, Audya 76,Yamaha S970 , vArranger, Hammond SK1, Ketron SD40, Centerpoint Space Station, Bose compact
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#234203 - 05/13/08 08:40 AM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/02
Posts: 1790
Loc: Medina, OH, USA
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Originally posted by Dnj: Lets you play with two hands Which is enjoyable for me, being a piano player. However, playing over a SMF can sound very busy, depending on the SMF. In most cases, I'll strip much of what's there, often leaving only drums, bass, and perhaps chording guitar. Two additional advantages, IMO, is having the freedom to keep my left hand on the pitch and mod wheels for sax and guitar solos. Also, spending less time looking for and punching buttons means better interacting with my audience. Glenn
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#234207 - 05/13/08 07:46 PM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Member
Registered: 06/24/05
Posts: 892
Loc: Baltimore, MD USA
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Donny you are absolutely right about mixing it up. I do that with some SMF's. I also take others into the studio and record background vocals over them I've even been known to use a couple of MP3's now and then. For instance, tonight I did a Senior Citizen prom in an upscale retirement complex. There was a large crowd of all ages from high school up to the seniors. I put on the Cha Cha Slide, and Cotton Eyed Joe as well as performing the electric slide and other line dances I do and you couldn't move on the dance floor it was so crowded. You've got to use every tool at your command to make it happen. Ciao, Joe ------------------ Songman55 Joe Ayala
_________________________
PSR S950, PSR S900, Roland RD 700, Yamaha C3 6'Grand, Sennheiser E 935 mic, several recording mics including a Neuman U 87, Bose L1 Compact, Roland VS 2480 24 Track Recorder Joe Ayala
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#234210 - 05/14/08 11:47 AM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
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Just try to remember one thing... playing over an SMF does NOT mean necessarily playing over a commercial SMF. You don't HAVE to sound just like the original (and probably even the original artist doesn't perform the tune EXACTLY like the single)... One of the best things that SMFs can do is to make your styles even more realistic. The nature of arrangers is that repetition thing... Same bassline for each variation, same fills for each transition, same horn licks in the second chorus as the first. But if you make your OWN SMFs from the arranger's output (so essentially, you are getting what you WOULD play if you were still in arranger mode), but then go the extra mile, and edit the SMF to help get rid of the repetition, and give it a bassline that sometimes moves in the direction of the NEXT chord change (something no arranger can do - anticipate a change), fills that are non-repetitive, etc., etc., you gain a backing that is NOT just a copy of the record, it is still your own creation. Add to that the ability to play at least TWO parts at a time yourself on top of that backing (you've got two hands, don't you? ), so less need for automated parts at all, and you get something that the audience will definitely notice is more live, more PLAYED, than just sitting there inputting the same old changes over and over again while you bang out the melody with your RH. Even though the backing is initially derived from the arranger output, you have knocked the sharp corners off the machine-like nature of it, and increased your degree of involvement in the final sound. Now take Mark/Jump abilities into consideration, and you have back a large degree of the arranger strength of re-ordering the sections. And one last thing. Make the registration include the Link to the SMF, and also the original style it was derived from, and midway through the SMF, or at the end to extend or segue into another tune, you can simply stop the SMF and sync-start the arranger (some arrangers do this seamlessly, others simply need practice to do it manually, but it CAN be done), and carry on in the usual fashion. Just don't get the fixed idea that SMF's ALWAYS have to be commercial files, and ALWAYS have to sound just like the record, and ALWAYS have to have too many parts. They can be, if you let them, be just as distinctive and unique as your arranger playing, and if you use them to free your LH from the tyranny of inputting the same chords over and over again (I'm sorry, but I see few here with the ability to reharmonize a tune on the fly, from what I've heard -at least intentionally! ), you can at least DOUBLE the amount of music that YOU are playing (not the machine), and that is something the audience WILL notice, being different every night...
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#234211 - 05/14/08 02:55 PM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/21/02
Posts: 5520
Loc: Port Charlotte,FL,USA
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Diki That's a great post. Thanks Bernie
_________________________
pa4X 76 ,SX900, Audya 76,Yamaha S970 , vArranger, Hammond SK1, Ketron SD40, Centerpoint Space Station, Bose compact
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#234212 - 05/17/08 07:14 PM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Member
Registered: 11/04/03
Posts: 541
Loc: Australia
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Well said Diki.
It's funny, but what you suggested (using SMFs created from your own modified arranger styles) I actually use for songwriting - I mean, that's WHY I use arrangers (as opposed to Synths/Workstations).
Live, I use SMFs (from so many different sources - free "off the net" (but ALWAYS modified/tweaked/stripped by myself), Pro files, and Custom made sequences occasionally written by myself, because whilst I agree with the "SMFs are mainly for singers statement" - we're Singers first, instrumentalists second - we are also very much a "Dance Act" and all the dancers we play to almost invariably practice with the original recordings, so SMFs/MP3s of those original recordings from the specific artists required, help beginner dancers, intermediate, (and even advanced) do their (sometimes complex and meticulous) routines perfectly.
Just another way to look at the reasoning behind using SMFs.
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#234213 - 05/18/08 03:13 AM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
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I really think that arrangers are by far the easiest way to START making music, but SMF's are the way to polish it off. Until that repetitive thing is dealt with, I always feel I am playing with a machine, but as soon as you go into the derived file, and start to mess things up a bit, suddenly it starts to sound like music that people played, not a machine... People are FAR more aware of mechanicalness of music than you give them credit for. No matter how untrained, most people's ears can distinguish when a section of music is just a cut and paste repeat, and not an actual 'replaying' it a second time. Once you edit the arranger's output so you get this impression, things start to feel a LOT more like playing in a real band... Whether for original music OR for cover tunes. Arrangers give the jumping off point, but they aren't the finishing line
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#234220 - 05/21/08 05:50 PM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14285
Loc: NW Florida
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Sorry, guys, but I have never had a DVD to learn from about any of this stuff. Somehow, I haven't turned it into an excuse not to try, and to not teach myself.
Sure, the first few times aren't going to produce much of any quality. Remember piano lessons (if you took them)? You didn't sound that good back then either. But it got better didn't it?
There are a plethora of resources on the web, and plenty of books on how to use MIDI sequencers. Manufacturer websites, third party instruction, software forums, you name it. How much time do you spend at them? Expecting the manufacturers to spoon feed it to you is unrealistic. This is YOUR job, not theirs.
How many of you are so computer phobic, you don't even HAVE a MIDI sequencer? Or a computer based DAW..? From all the enthusiasm that greets utterly lame on board keyboard versions of these, I would say a lot... And yet, here you are, posting on the WWW, on a forum, getting your email, doing your taxes, downloading stuff from YouTube, the iTunes store, whatever...
Put that determination into learning a decent sequencer, RTFM (most of you wouldn't even NEED a DVD if you just did this AS YOU ARE TRYING THINGS OUT), and the whole concept of editing your arranger's MIDI output to get rid of the bloody repetitiveness of it would be a snap.
But refusing to even try because your arranger manufacturer doesn't make a DVD (that you will outgrow in a week) smacks of defeatism.
JUST DO IT! ?
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#234222 - 05/21/08 07:38 PM
Re: STYLES Boring you? Why not play on top of MIDI FILES?
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/31/06
Posts: 3354
Loc: The World
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