![]() I also bought all the HY-Plugins sequencers which I am having a blast with and can recommend to all and sundryĮventually I'm sure I'll want to build a fully-custom sequencer for something or other, and then it'll come into its own □ Also I own Plogue Bidule which can handle most of the lower-level MIDI processing things I need using off-the-shelf modules. I moved over to Bitwig which has many useful sequencing and note processing functions. Good to see more MIDI manipulation stuff getting traction, i think that's been a very under-utilized area of music tech.Įdit: and welcome to WATMM from a former longtime lurker as well Edited Januby auxienĪmazing tool for sure but it hasn't had much use here tbh. I'm currently considering grabbing a Blokas Midihub ( ) for similar fun and fuckery, but obviously not as complex.tho you can do some pretty interesting and tricky stuff with it us it's designed more for loading onto the device then removing from the computer which is essentially a necessity for me these days. ![]() i'm sure there's a few around here who would be into this if they've not yet heard about it. i'm trying (trying!) to stay off of the computer for the most part when it comes to making music so i don't think it's something for me, but if i had seen this years ago i may have been very excited about.this is exactly the sort of thing i was wanting to learn Max for. definitely has the same look/general approach as Max, but for MIDI, like you said. Looking through the quick start guide (which is almost 40 pages lol) and this is obviously a pretty powerful piece of software. ![]() ![]() I never really introduced myself here despite having lurked here for some years now so. It's also of course amazing at mathematic / algorithmic / generative sequencing and even just straight forward sequencing, the preset sequencers it comes with are already much deeper than anything you'll find in hardware.įinally, I've not done extensive testing but I've experimented with some time critical stuff at like 999bpm and the timing has always been very tight which was a nice surprise after hearing so many people complain about timing issues when using a computer for their sequencing.Īlso. You can however save your patches as 'fragments' which can then be loaded so not being able to save projects really isn't a huge limitation, I pretty much only bought it to support the developer as I think he's done a real great job with it.Īgain, I'm really new to this kind of approach to music but I've so far made an editor for my Volca sample which adds a bunch of utilities that they don't currently have (such as being able to store a kit with a project rather than using the internal storage of the volca) I've also made a sequencer for my Motas-6 that allows it to be sequenced like a 303 with slides and accents and also a sequencer that turns the Motas-6 into a drum machine with up to 9 independent voices (at a stretch). The demo version is free and the only limitation is that you can't save a project. Here's the site if anyone's interested in having a look: I've already got a ton of really nice results from it and even more inspiration but would love to have other people to chat with about patch designing and such. I'm pretty new to using software for sequencing but people describe it as being like Max but devoted entirely to MIDI. Anyone a user of this program here? I bought it a few months back and have completely fallen in love with it. ![]()
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