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Soundplant playback tempo
Soundplant playback tempo




  1. #Soundplant playback tempo how to#
  2. #Soundplant playback tempo manual#
  3. #Soundplant playback tempo portable#

I have been pouring over Youtube to see what others have done or are doing. I'll be interested to see how this progresses as well. Things to ponder Is it better to use pure midi or pure audio, which is more stable? Why do you need multi track output and how do you set this up? What do you use for lyrics? Other than Sonar what do you find works the best for live playback? Please add your set up and ideas and yes for sure ask questions. I am going to give Sonars Playlist a try someday but the only reason is so I will have MIDI to control my effects. At this point I see no advantage to having say 3 tracks output. I proof them through the PA and have a few tricks I use to keep everything the same song to song. Because it's dead simple to make a mix of 3 instruments I've rarely had balance issues with my tracks. And I also control it with a USB foot switch. You can re arrange the GUI to fit your screen. It will re open with your set list intact even if you forgot to save it. You can drag the songs around on the set list on the fly.

#Soundplant playback tempo manual#

The most important for me is you can set it to Manual Playlist advance. I choose Win Amp because it does a few things no other player seem to do. I'll give you my system which I've used since 2004.

#Soundplant playback tempo how to#

So making the tracks is easy with Sonar but now lets chew on how to work with this live on stage. Bass and drums are what keep time so now you need to follow a click track or? Will get into that latter as the thread progresses. Where it becomes tricky is when you have a real bass player or drummer. Keyboard and drums backing tracks all you need is a stereo or even mono mix. Those are the 3 instruments midi does best and if you, like me have those 3 instruments playing following the backing track is straight forward. Please don't even attempt to use midi for guitar parts or I will personally come and unplug your PA :) For Bass. Many top 40 bands have relied on sequencers to fill in the holes when they didn't have a Keyboard, Bass or drummer. I don''t believe in overdoing it or we can be walking a fine line between a musician performing and a Karaoke singer. I now include keyboards in every song to provide 'glue".

soundplant playback tempo

The reason was disk space if you can believe that. Very few of my old tracks included piano, organ or keyboard parts. Most importantly is what instruments do you require? For most of my gigs I've used a pretty sparse backing of just Drums and Bass. So first there are many approaches to using backing tracks. For me that's all been replaced by a little Asus netbook that weighs about 4lbs. I lugged an Atari 1040 ST to 100's of gigs along with a rack of sound modules and effect units all weighing over 100lbs. Those sound modules that were on par and often worse than MS Wavetable sounds cost $$$. Originally we used midi sequences to drive outboard hardware synths. Not only can you use midi but we can also mix in real instruments as part of the band. As someone who started with a Roland 505 for drums and a Korg Poly 800 playing Bass ( very badly) what we now have is amazing to me. It's a great midi sequencer and it's included VST's are all you need to create a pretty good sounding backing band. As far as creating backing tracks goes Sonar for me is king of the hill. I thought a thread to share ideas and what works and what doesn't work might be a good resource for people kicking the tires. Every once in a while someone asks this question and I know there are many of us here who play live using backing tracks. ini file in the program directory.The "Sonar for Live Performance Backing track" Thread Please keep topic to Backing tracks for traditional Rock, country, Jazz and Folk.

#Soundplant playback tempo portable#

It's portable "out of the box" and writes to a. Sounds can be easily batch assigned across multiple keys at varying pitches and offsets, and keyboard configurations can be saved and loaded.". A simple graphic interface provides for drag-and-drop, point-and-click configuration of each key, including several options which control the way each sound is triggered, along with pitch, offsets, looping, volume, and panning. Because it is not a synthesizer and instead uses your own digital samples (it's a 'software sampler'), Soundplant is a virtually limitless electronic instrument.

soundplant playback tempo

It can be used as a drum pad, to add a live track to an already made song, to mix together tracks in realtime, to create music or loops from scratch, to quickly sketch sound designs, to give new life to old sounds, or as a performance, presentation, or installation tool.

soundplant playback tempo soundplant playback tempo

It allows the assignment of sound files of unlimited size to virtually any keyboard keys, with no external devices needed and no MIDI involved. "Soundplant is a self-contained digital audio performance program that turns your computer keyboard into a fully customizable sample-triggering device (yes, your QUERTY keyboard!).






Soundplant playback tempo