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#375485 - 11/16/13 09:25 PM
Re: To buy or not to buy ?
[Re: spalding1968]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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The thing that occurs to me is, why do you want to avoid the easiest, most cost effective, most powerful way to record and compose music available today?
The computer.
Even the most sophisticated workstations, let alone the latest greatest arrangers, come a VERY distant second to the power, ease of use and quality of sounds available to computer users.
Sure, you need an arranger in the first place to perhaps speed up the initial composing and comping process, but trying to shoehorn the entire process into one keyboard is, IMO, unnecessarily cramping your style, limiting your options, and putting a self-imposed limit on how good the sounds you use are...
There is no comparison between the better VSTi's and keyboard sounds nowadays. No matter HOW good the arranger sounds, there's a VSTi (often at a cost of a 20th of the arranger, even less when you consider a $5000 Tyros!). There is no comparison between the ease and power of recording audio and manipulating it on a nice 27" screen rather than a tiny 4" window, nor does any arranger have as high quality a suite of effects for any conceivable need.
Personally, I would recommend the least expensive arranger you can get away with, in fact, maybe stick with the PA1X you already have. It's enough to quickly record a MIDI rough of the tune (plenty of PA3X to PA1x style conversions out there, plus a ton of other manufacturer styles have been converted). But combine this with a computer, a nice DAW, and a suite of VSTi's and a loop library, and you can make music no one arranger ever will...
Is there any particular reason other than technophobia that is preventing you wanting to use the BEST tool for the job?
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#375498 - 11/16/13 10:17 PM
Re: To buy or not to buy ?
[Re: spalding1968]
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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That's certainly true to my ears ! But I want and need a true workstation arranger hybrid and tyros really loses out even compared to my 10 year old pa1x as a workstation. Love the tyros sounds but can't live without onboard sequencing and editing features . It really is a deal breaker unfortunately . I understand where you are coming from, Worth...I like having it all in my keyboard as well. The Tyros4's sequencer's editing is fine for what I do, but the Korg beats it, being more powerful. However, I also like my Tyros4's ability to send the midi recording to it's on-board audio recorder...Elvis never has to leave the building. I suspect Korg will come out with another TOTL arranger in the not too distant future, so PA3X instruments will be on the market, and since you are comfortable with Korg's OS, it should be a strong consideration. The PA3X is a fair jump from your own PA-1X, especially with the DNC voices, and has nearly as good third party support as Yamaha. Good luck, my friend. If you do get a Tyros4, that offer of my personal styles still applies , but I really think you'd be better served by the Korg. Ian
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Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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#375562 - 11/17/13 03:36 PM
Re: To buy or not to buy ?
[Re: spalding1968]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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For me, it is a balance between workflow and quality of final results...
In a perfect world, you could do it all in the keyboard, but there would be a nice 27" monitor attached, to make seeing everything you need easy on the eyes. And a mouse input, to navigate with quickly, and make quick selection possible.
But short of some of the TOTL 'computer in a keyboard' instruments (Neko, Mediastation, etc.), the price you pay for being able to sit at a keyboard and do it all is FAR less ease of use. And ease of use is what it appears you are after. One of the problems you have with a 'one box' solution is that, all you get is what that one box can do. If this is up to your standards, I guess you are good to go. But personally, I find that the arranger output is only the START of the process. After that comes considerable editing and replacement of arranger parts with played ones, addition of considerable loop audio, and then replacement of the arranger's sounds with better sounds from either other keyboards, or VSTi's.
THEN... you have whatever audio you want to record, from as basic a thing as a simple vocal (never really that simple if you want to comp together multiple takes!) to backing vocals, to real guitar parts. And here, the computer is king. No arguments at all. From easy comping, to insert effects far beyond what the arranger can do, to ease of identification of what track does what, to a track count no arranger can match...
In fact, there really isn't an arranger that can handle multi-track audio without horribly convoluted workarounds. Most of them have simple 'one take' audio recorders that offer little control, if any. If all you want to do is record your voice singing the song (from beginning to end, better not make a flub in the middle!) you are probably good to go. And if that's all you intend to do, sure, have at it. But I think you'll find yourself wanting to put on a bit more polish than that, after a while.
Maybe you just want to record quick and dirty song demos, roughs that won't see the light of day, but if you want to record something more professional, I'm afraid a computer is going to have to be a part of your arsenal. Look, it might seem a bit daunting to start with, but it's just the same as mastering any modern TOTL arranger. It's going to take a while. But, at least with the computer, there is no artificial upper limit to what you can do. You'll be banging the ceiling on any modern arranger, trying to record a complete song on it.
And, in the end, the computer you buy will be a tiny fraction of what something like a PA3x or T5 is going to cost you, and you can always go laptop, if you can't get access to the house computer for music making. But it's power is exponentially better.
In the end, it comes down to what you want to do. If all you want is a quick sketchpad, the arranger will do in a pinch. But if your plans include any audio and a finished master, you are going to find arrangers severely limiting.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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