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#376657 - 11/28/13 02:49 PM
Re: The open arrangers
[Re: Bachus]
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/21/05
Posts: 5390
Loc: English Riviera, UK
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Hi Diki
The price is not an issue, as they are all part of the organ range, and if you look at the Orla, Lowrey, Roland, Bohm organs etc. the Wersi are fully price competitive. (It’s a different market to the arranger market) Wersi’s only true arranger is the Pegasus Wing which has all the easy play features, but more limited controls and features, thus the cost is considerably less than a TOTL Arranger from the Yamaha, Ketron etc.
As I have said many times I ditched organs/arrangers in the late 80s and went over to a full computer based system, (I started using Midi almost as soon as it had come out in the early 80s) and if Wersi (Or another manufacture) had not come out with an instrument that could have the software on-board I would still be using a fully computer based system. (Downsides are that you cannot have it in the lounge without complaints, whereas a Wersi you can have it in the lounge with no complaints)
Bill
_________________________
English Riviera: Live entertainment, Real Ale, Great Scenery, Great Beaches, why would anyone want to live anywhere else (I�m definitely staying put).
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#376737 - 11/29/13 01:41 PM
Re: The open arrangers
[Re: Bachus]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14276
Loc: NW Florida
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What is an organ, but two manuals and some pedals? $15,000 MORE, just for that?
Give me a break!
Let us also not forget, you are on an ARRANGER forum. Go off to an organ forum if you want to argue about whether $20,000 is good value for one of those. In the arranger world, it is a very bad joke!
I also think you are being extremely optimistic that 10% of arranger users would appreciate and be able to utilize the full power of an OAS $20,000 'organ'. Me, I'd put it at well under 1%. And, TBH, it appears that not ONE of this 1% ever posts here. Just proud owners too shy about their skills to post anything that supports their arguments. I'm sorry, but if dropping $20,000 doesn't give you results you are willing to put up alongside the numerous user demos of Yamaha's, Korg's and Roland's (not to mention Ketron!), just exactly how good is it?
Maybe Synthzone can start a 'General Furniture Forum' for those that think $15,000 extra is worth it for something a hair less ugly than a T5? LOL
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#376757 - 11/29/13 03:22 PM
Re: The open arrangers
[Re: Diki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 03/02/06
Posts: 7143
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What is an organ, but two manuals and some pedals? $15,000 MORE, just for that?
Give me a break!
Let us also not forget, you are on an ARRANGER forum. Go off to an organ forum if you want to argue about whether $20,000 is good value for one of those. In the arranger world, it is a very bad joke!
I also think you are being extremely optimistic that 10% of arranger users would appreciate and be able to utilize the full power of an OAS $20,000 'organ'. Me, I'd put it at well under 1%. And, TBH, it appears that not ONE of this 1% ever posts here. Just proud owners too shy about their skills to post anything that supports their arguments. I'm sorry, but if dropping $20,000 doesn't give you results you are willing to put up alongside the numerous user demos of Yamaha's, Korg's and Roland's (not to mention Ketron!), just exactly how good is it?
Maybe Synthzone can start a 'General Furniture Forum' for those that think $15,000 extra is worth it for something a hair less ugly than a T5? LOL If you would have read all posts, you would have known why organs are so much more expensive to produce... I.e. Not being able to produce them at a factory line.. Sad thing however that it indeed is the same technollogy as in the much cheeper production line total arrangers. Same goes for top of the line digital pianos, same technollogy, and even for synth workstations..
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#377047 - 12/03/13 01:05 PM
Re: The open arrangers
[Re: Bachus]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14276
Loc: NW Florida
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Something I've never seen a discussion of, when it comes to VSTi use with an arranger is, how well do they implement the codes that arrangers use to 'bend' or 'snap' old notes to new ones when you play a chord a tiny fraction late...
Let me explain...
If you've ever looked at the MIDI event code of an arranger 'capture', you'll often see a lot of codes that turn on portamento to time=0, then make the original note a tiny, short one and replace it with the correct note, which the original gets bent, or 'snapped' to. In other words, if you are playing a G chord, then ask for a C chord just a TINY fraction of a beat late, on the 'one' of the beat or bar, the notes for that G chord will play, then a few ticks later the notes for the C chord will appear, BUT, there's no re-triggering of the note, so you don't really hear anything much, because it has been portamento'd with a time of zero to the new note, so the envelopes don't retrigger.
Now, those of you using VSTi's with arrangers... how well does it deal with this, or does it ignore all that kind of stuff and stutter around a bit?
There's a lot going on under the hood with arrangers to help it mitigate our less than perfect playing. But when you use VSTi's, do they do the same thing?
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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