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#508731 - 08/21/23 06:22 AM
Re: Full circle
[Re: cgiles]
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Member
Registered: 11/11/04
Posts: 708
Loc: Russia
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thank you, Chas. Actually, as Zuki entitled the topic "Full Circle", I feel that my message lies upon the subject, because what I'm experiencing now is distancing from my usual routine while questioning it myself. I hoped that buying SX900 would give me inspiration as it happened when I got previous keyboards, but it didn't happen, although now being away I miss something of my SX900. Certainly it didn't help that after 1 month of playing the keys started to produce noise, I had to get it to a service, and the service was incompetent, so the grease they used gave only a temporary fix, and then I decided to leave Russia (temporary, I hope), thus so far my story about SX900 isn't a happy one :-)
And the music you hear in my video is something I'm learning myself, I don't have any formal training, and I used to think that this kind of work wasn't my cup of tea, that everything shoud be created on the fly, and this approach reminds a lot of an office job. But now I'm thinking maybe it's not a bad thing - an office job. Well, this is me getting older :-)
I think people with really powerful computers don't experience problems with latency, otherwise we wouldn't have so many piano libraries; but I'm yet to check it myself. Some time ago I would've replied to your question with certainty saying that hardware instruments were definately my way to deal with music. Maybe now I feel more like to create music step-by-step, so what felt wrong before now feels okay, and what was exciting in the past, today isn't so much...
But I have to consider that due to the economics I never had a chance to get an instrument of a higher scale, like Tyros, or Genos, or PA4X; maybe if I had all the up-to-date upgrades I would've felt differently by now, but it's not a perfect world; I'm sure that with today's prices for TOTL keyboards people all over the world feel that they are being extorted.
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#508732 - 08/21/23 08:20 AM
Re: Full circle
[Re: zuki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/20/02
Posts: 4723
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Very nice Sergey,
You sure are a busy guy! Kudos for trying many ways to make music.
Diki mentioned to 'stop the arranger' and use what else it offers. In my opinion and experience, that makes the PA4X very useless, especially 61 keys. I cannot use this board for acoustic pianos, although it has awesome other sounds. It will always be my live board.
The Juno DS is interesting, with a boatload of available Roland sounds for free. (I have the Sweetwater pen that came it). I bought it 2nd hand for $350 and have a blast with it. I'm moving from this because of the 61 keys (good enough price to try out).
But, feet wet and exploring, the FA gives one that next step, with a full 16 track sequencer and many options, including the updated sound engine. I like everything I see about the FA and can only imagine the advancement over the DS - wow. I also enjoyed the video of you playing your FA. The pianos are definitely different that Yamaha.
Sergey, hope you find your new/old home and can settle in soon. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and MUSIC.
zuki
Edited by zuki (08/21/23 08:22 AM)
_________________________
Live: Korg PA4X/EV Everse 8s/Senn 935/K&M stand
Studio: Korg PA4X/Yamaha DGX670/Nord 6D73/Boss BR900CD/Tascam DP24SD/MTM Iloud/Sony C80/AGK 214/ATEM Mini Pro switcher/K&M stand
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#508733 - 08/21/23 01:46 PM
Re: Full circle
[Re: zuki]
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Member
Registered: 11/11/04
Posts: 708
Loc: Russia
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I also enjoyed the video of you playing your FA. The pianos are definitely different that Yamaha. I guess you mean DS, as I never had FA :-) I have the Sweetwater pen that came it) To tell the truth this is a very difficult sentence for a foreigner to get :-) I'm thinking now that when there's an option to change one keyboard to another without too much fuss, each keyboard stays in constant competition against all of the others, in other words, there's a lot of room for second guessing; so it's not a trouble if the process is fun for you, but I imagine that there's still some fuss to deal with and that you actually plan to focus on playing it rather then changing it. The thing is with the most of products that they are intentionally desinged with certain flaws so that there will be motivation to get a more expensive one. In my youth I had to buy certain models because of financial limitations... Well, this is still the case. But when you are young and it is all new to you, it is easy to compromise because you are focused on these new things; when I got PSR-3000 it sounded so different from my previous keyboard, that certainly was mesmerizing, and it was this way with each keyboard before, but not that much with each keyboard after. I think after that there are two options. On of them is to accept that excitement is no longer connected with getting new product, which we can consider as some sort of emancipation. Another option is going to the premium sector, if you can afford it. I currently can't. In case with home pianos, that would be some of TOTL home pianos from Yamaha or Roland... In the same time, we are talking about digital instruments, so they are more or less reasonably priced - it's not art or luxury. Well, I would hate to influence your decisions when it comes to financial matters, in the same time this is what we do, we talk; and choosing not to say something is also sort of influence. I'm biased right now for some personal reasons, but speaking my mind, I see two reasons why it's justified to buy some middle-of-the-line instrument: when you are not sure that you are going to play at all (not everyone actually plays), or if it's financially impossible to buy a TOTL, for example, Genos now costs in Russia about 500.000 rubles, while an average income is 25.000 per month, and half of it goes for food, and about 10.000 goes for paying the bills. A lot of people in the world live like that, and that's the reason why actually have decent instruments for $300. But we understand that this is still abnormal, people here understand that a proper paycheck starts at 150.000 rubles, not 25.000 rubles. Well, you see, something bothers me... it's a night time here; see you later ! :-)
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#508737 - 08/22/23 08:35 AM
Re: Full circle
[Re: zuki]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14263
Loc: NW Florida
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There are some tricks you can use to make using VSTi’s easier with less powerful computers. Mind you, nowadays even pretty entry level computers (like Mac Mini M2) are so powerful that a lot of the ‘old school’ workarounds aren’t nearly as necessary.
The big problem is, if you want a VSTi to feel like hardware keyboards, you want to set latency as low as you can get away with. But while you have it set that way, now the computer is trying to play the entire project at that super low latency! So the main trick a lot of us used was to render the master mix as a stereo audio file before we get to playing the next part in. Once that is rendered, you turn off ALL the other VSTi Parts, and now the computer is hardly doing anything else (playing that one stereo submit is easy for even ancient computers!).
Once you have settled on the new part and got the MIDI right and edited, render a new ‘master mix’, delete the old one, and work on the next sound. This way, you can probably set your soundcard to sub-5ms latency (which is where I start to feel like I’m playing hardware) and not get dropouts in the VSTi.
But if even all that can’t stop your computer glitching, then it’s probably time to look at a new one. Or investigate other similar plug-ins that are more CPU efficient. Plus many plug-ins allow you to record using a less CPU heavy version, then switch to the best possible sound once you wind your latency back up to mixing levels.
You can also get some headroom for live playing by turning off the reverbs on other tracks. And check your DAW features. Some of them can turn off all effects on tracks that are muted, which helps.
But a very basic modern computer completely blows away anything from ten years ago. If using computers to make music seems like where you’re heading, upgrading the computer is going to give you the best bang for the buck.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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