Direct Note Access

Andrew Robinson EMAIL HIDDEN
Wed Mar 12 22:13:24 CET 2008


This is going to have crazy implications for sampling. Never mind an
infintely editable recording of you playing chords, how about an
infinitely editable recording of a Hendrix solo?

- Andy_R

On Wed, Mar 12, 2008 at 9:03 PM, Andy Tarpinian <evildead at nyc.rr.com> wrote:
>
>  On Mar 12, 2008, at 7:40 AM, Gert van Santen wrote:
>
>  > Gorman, Declan schreef:
>  >> Exactly. It was only used on rather uncomplicated sounds. Wondering
>  >> how
>  >> it will work on electric guitars, choirs or even complete tracks...
>  >> <
>  >>
>  >> It doesn't separate by instrument but by note so if a vocal part and
>  >> instrumkent part share the same note they will both appear as one
>  >> blob
>  >> on the screen.
>  >
>  > Aha. But if they don't, there will be
>  > multiple blobs... :-)
>
>  So in other words I can play the same chord over and over on a guitar
>  to a rhythm and record it, and then in the computer change those
>  chords to anything I want to match my song, so essentially making a
>  perfect infinitely editable "sample" of the guitar. I think I just
>  passed out while typing that sentence.
>
>
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