September 26, 2004

Another Direction

hopefully

Since I have finally finished the 120 ways song, I can at last move onto other things. Let me explain why I bought the gear I did:
In the last few years I have been attempting to get to the point where I could do live solo shows, just me and all the gear I can handle - but not with a computer, or I should say an actual computer, not a music machine that is a computer.
Combined with this I want to play my horns and sing. Its important to me, to see if I can pull this off. I played so many years in bands, so its not like I am trying to prove that I can get on a stage - its more like I want to see what I can do improvisationally without the additon of extra people. Also, its difficult to find anyone who can be on the same wavelength as me; and of course I don't have to mess with anyone's schdule but my own. If I don't make progress, I can only be mad at myself.
So I went out and purchased some great grooveboxes, the Korg EA1, ER1 - which I think is a classic drum machine - a Yamaha DX200 and finally an Emu XL7, which I bought primarilly as a way to run the other machines. I didn't realize at the time what a great synth it was in its own right.
I then made sort of a tactial error. Instead of simply concentrating on what the XL could do by itself, I spent a lot of time integrating it into my other synths on the idea that I wanted to control the other grooveboxes with the XL by playing back midi files of songs I wrote.
This was very frustrating and quite time consuming. I am not inexperienced with MIDI, not after 10 years, and I finally got most of it up and running. But as a consequence, I didn't really use the XL to anywhere near its potential.
As time went on, I realized that I was spending more time messing with the gear than writing music, and getting no further along to my goal: play live.
I had another insight as some point: I decided that I wanted to get a complete CD done, so that I would have actually finished something for once, and also as a promotional tool - and maybe sell some thru CD baby and at shows. Not that I expect to make a killing off of this by any means, but it would be nice to make some $ to get more gear, right?
I have been concentrating then on getting songs done for the CD. One problem tho is that I have everything running on one set of midi ins and outs thru my interface.
This makes a lot of sense if you are trying to control everything live with the XL; however, if you aren't doing that, you lose some flexiblity by having everything ganged together. In particular, the DX200 has a definate weirdness to its operating system and midi implimentation: you can only use pitch bend if the DX is on midi channel one, and it does not correctly pass midi thru from the XL or anything else - trust me, I have been thru all the tests and messing around possible on this, it just doesn't work right.
It also affects being able to use the velocity sensitive pads on the XL to program drum beats, and to use the XL as a general midi controller, which is another reason I bought it.
One other thing, and here it is: it would be much, much, much easier to play gigs only using the XL7 and my horns: nothing to mess up with syncing or anything like that.
Therefore, I have made an important decision, well, important for me anyway: I am scrapping the idea of using the other grooveboxes live at all, and just use the XL and my horns. Of course, I will have to substitute the sounds from the other grooveboxes with sounds from the XL so as not to miss parts that I generated outside the XL. I realize that in most cases, the sounds won't be as nice as the external machines, since they each have a distinctive character, but no one will be able durning my live shows to notice the difference except me, and I won't be telling, will I?
I think if I wanted to still drag say the ER1 with me, I could manually change its patch numbers and have it still sync tempo with the XL and run its patterns off its internall sequencer; I will have to consider this.
There is some boring work related to this: changing the instrument defintions in Sonar so that the machines are pointing at their new correct ports, so I have to go into each song before I do this and note the bank and patch assignments so I won't lose them as I change the port assignments - but I can do that.
I think this will free me up a lot when I do live stuff, since if all I have to worry about is using the XL, it will make it all easy on me since the XL won't have any problems using its internal sounds, and I can still dump the midi files from Sonar into it (modified to use the internal XL sounds). It should give me the ability to freely improvise with the XL, which is the whole point of this box, plus the ability to control all the things I want to in Sonar from the XL. This hopefully will make mixing a more interactive thing, rather than just drawing envelopes in by hand, not to mention controlling DXis with all the knobs from the XL.
A lot to think about, but its all about having choices and making the most of the gear, right?

Posted by dana at September 26, 2004 10:34 AM
Comments

Hey Dana.
That was a great entry. I enjoyed it thoroughly and have experienced the same realizations many times concerning spending more time with music rather than monkeying around with gear.

I really wish you the best in your efforts to release a full length finished CD as well as playing out live by yourself. They are surely huge tasks; nevertheless, I would suspect that someone with the amount of passion, determination, and musical proficiency that you posess will succeed undoubtedly.

Catch ya at the forum.
Jay

btw... I've recently finished building an online store that will sell hand picked independent albums in addition to sample libraries, web templates, video content, etc... Let me know when you finish this disk and there surely will be a place for your release in my store! :)

Posted by: Jay on September 26, 2004 11:42 AM

"Don't focus on the toys - focus on the noise." ;)
Your personal writing style continues to grow, another great article.
:D

Posted by: Andrew on October 3, 2004 04:57 PM

Thanks much Andrew, a positive comment like that really makes my day!

Posted by: dana on October 6, 2004 09:48 AM
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