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#350969 - 09/12/12 01:25 AM
Re: Audio Styles vs Midi Styles which do you prefer?
[Re: Tonewheeldude]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/08
Posts: 3456
Loc: South Africa
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Hi all,
I am very much into the audio styles. Like stated somewhere else:
I've found that, for each onboard style, by adding i.e:
1. Different Audio drums 2. Different grooves for each variation - started using these & it's AWESOME!!! 3. Different audio bass tracks including their AWESOME riffs for each variation 4. Different loops for each variation for channel 4 5. Different audio live guitars for each variation 6. The ability to have my live guitars change on the fly purely by the way I press my chords 7. Assigning different vocal harmonies & settings to each variation
provide more than enough AWESOME variation for me, done on the fly & then saved as a single registration that also includes the style in the registration.
One simply selects ANY style found, and this forms only the very basis of what can be created. I can take the very same style, change all the above and you will not believe for the life of you that it started off by being the same style. The same can be done for any midi only style. I hardly use any onboard style as is anymore because of the ease I can create all the above with. And I become better at this with every style I change. Best part is, that whilst using this live, I can make more changes on the fly and simply re-save the registration before playing the next song. AWESOME!!! AWESOME!!! AWESOME!!!
To top this all, the AJAMSONIC upgrade adds another 850 audio drum loops, many, many new AWESOME live guitar loops plus all of the Tyros 4 equivalent human choir voices (not even included in the new Yamaha S950). Plus, Sokratis made available all the awesome SD series drums. I can NEVER be bored with the audio styles coupled with the powerful onboard audio style editor.
Really, one CANNOT appreciate all of the above and it's effects without having the Audya at least for a week or so. And be sure to know what can be accomplished on it before you start to take it for a week long test drive - there's just so many things to explore during this week.
And as Tonewheeldude correctly stated, if you do not like the audio part, you've still got a top of the line midi arranger with more than enough midi stuff to keep you very, very, very busy indeed!
It's a win win situation, anyway you look at it!
Keep well all my friends,
Henni
_________________________
Make sure you'll fly forever!
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#350988 - 09/12/12 05:38 AM
Re: Audio Styles vs Midi Styles which do you prefer?
[Re: Tonewheeldude]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14266
Loc: NW Florida
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My only reservations about audio loops in styles comes about BECAUSE of their strengths... not because of their weaknesses.
There is no doubt that the realism of most of the audio styles is head and shoulders above most of our CURRENT MIDI arrangers. But that is precisely the problem! If you can't get audio styles in genres that you want to use, you are back to using MIDI styles. And a poorer comparison. Again, all I can say is, if the MIDI styles in the Ketron (and the rest of our MIDI arrangers) aren't noticeably inferior, what's the POINT of the feature? And if they ARE, then style production and editing IS a problem. I have always said... if your needs are COMPLETELY covered by what the Ketron comes with (or covered by the AJ additions), you are good to go.
But, in all fairness, how many of us buy an arranger, and ONLY use the styles it came with? Not many, I would hazard a guess. And here is where audio arrangers have a distinct weakness. Your vast collection of older styles you have used for years, your growing library of style converted from other arranger's styles, your collection of favorite user created styles... NONE of these are going to compare as well to the audio styles.
But... if arranger manufacturers concentrate on using new technology (SSD's, fast RAM etc.) to simply give us MIDI drum kits, and guitar samples, better amp simulators (for realistic overdrive guitar parts) and accurate guitar modes, then all your OLD styles and SMF's get the same boost in realism that the NEW styles get.
This is the main objection to the Ketron (and new Yamaha) systems. It's not that they don't work. It's not that they don't sound great (however, I'm sorry, but mixing and matching audio and MIDI for guitar parts still makes no sense - if you can't tell the difference, why use it? and if you can, then there is work to be done). It's that they are not supported to the degree that MIDI arrangers are with regard to new styles, new genres, and legacy styles.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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