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#253128 - 01/23/09 06:33 AM
Re: 09 Shreveport Arranger Jam!
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Senior Member
Registered: 08/22/04
Posts: 1457
Loc: Athens, Greece
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Maybe they use loops where applicable, and individial notes or slices elsewhere:
1) Drums use loops: you can't (I mean don't need) to transpose, there are no chords etc.
2) Accompaniment uses individual notes to "assemble" a chord, avoiding the need to record multiple loops per style/variation, as AJ stated.
One way to achieve this would be to use a real guitarist to record both the audio and the midi events (via a midi converter soemthing). Say we record someone play a chord (say C), over a period of time, some measures, over some different positions on the guitar, (say 4 positions, from lower to higher)
We get the midi notes that capture all the individual micro timings and nuances of his playing (what makes the playing "human"), and store it somewhere.
Then we get the audio and "slice" it horizontally, over time, into individual notes (C and E and G) we now have a set 3 different samples, multiplied by 4 positions, 12 samples on total, in 4 sets. So if we manage to get enough sets, don't we have the ability to play a D (DFA) just by playing the original "C set" but like (Note 1=2 semitones higher - Note2=1 semitone higher - Note 3=2 semitones higher?
The "feel" of the timing will be there, because that is what we captured with the original midi track, and I think that we will also capture the feel of 3 notes struck together and "belonging" together instead of 3 separate notes "joined" by a traditional ROMpler. And maybe we don't have to retrigger notes in a late chord press, at least in a similar chord because while playing a C and say change to a Cm, we just have to "leave" sets 1 and 3 as they are and transpose the 2nd stream 1 semitone down. Kind of hard to notice in a busy part.
Of course, I don't know one end of the guitar from the other, so this thing might not apply in reality, feel free to say so, or expand the theory.
Congratulate or torch me, Theodore
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