By scd
Sun Mar 01, 2009 9:08 am
Blue Haze wrote:Great props for that Jah, you probably asked for the one keygroup per track feature without qlink too.
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Blue Haze wrote:Great props for that Jah, you probably asked for the one keygroup per track feature without qlink too.

scd wrote:Blue Haze wrote:You probably don't know but Askia helped a great deal with shaping OS2 into what it is now. He spend more time on testing than one could imagine and did a GREAT job.
Great props for that Jah, you probably asked for the one keygroup per track feature without qlink too.
Still the question scd are you resampling your synths from the mpc 5 itself?
There was no nood to with all these hardware synths around, but your question made me curious, so I did a little test this morning.
- Created a synth sound, put some effects on it till I was happy (chorus, phaser and bitreducer)
- Sampled 20 samples: C0 - Dis0 - Fis0 - A0 - C1 etc.
- Created a keygroup program laying out these samples over 20 keygroups
- Created two layers with the same samples, panned left and right, with a slight detuning on layer 2: this creates a fat rich sound impossible to achieve with just the synth program alone
- Put reverb and tape delay on it (also from the 5k)
– Recorded three short sequences and put those together in a "song"
- Exported the wav to my computer
– Created an MP3 and uploaded the thing on my ftp server
- Wrote this post
All done within an hour
http://www.synthmusic.info/mpdries/resynth.mp3
One can argue the sound, but my experience was that it all goes fast and smooth working like this on the 5k.
So the answer is yes, I've done it and the results can be pretty nice, because you can combine synth samples in layers, filter them again, add effects, detune them etc. etc.

scd wrote:Blue Haze wrote:Great props for that Jah, you probably asked for the one keygroup per track feature without qlink too.
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However, after doing keygroup programming using software, I would never use any of the current MPCs to do the same chores. It is a waste of time and significantly underpowered as I have written numerous times. I prefer to use sound modules or software synths for sounds and my 5K to sequence. Owning an MPC 4000 or a 5K with OS 2 would not change this.
For those that need keygroups in an MPC...the 5K provides keygroup programs that can have up to 128 keygroups...each with an independant range of 0-127 (notes C -2 to G8). Plus, each keygroup has 4 sample layers. This makes it possible to layer up to 512 sounds. But then that would be pointless because MPCs only offer 64 voice polyphony. Based upon this, it is my opinon that the 5K does more than enough for layering. After you are done layering your sounds in a keygroup program, you assign each program directly to a track as you would in a DAW.
In OS 2, Q-links do not control filters, LFOs, etc in keygroup and sample programs as they do with Synth Programs.




I still prefer pulling up a software sampler or hardware sound modules and load presets. I am not into doing deep programming.
Blue Haze wrote:Good that is what sampling is all about creating your own. Anyone can use a sample player to play a piano patch that is very basic stuff but we want to create our own all from scratch with multisamples of course to come up with one of a kind customized patches. That has been the point of keygroups all along not just to load a patch kit.

4dahaterz wrote:MUSIC IS ABOUT DOING YOU
Whether its a preset or whatever... before we had all these synths and beat machines, when it was just real a$$ musicians, everybody had just a Piano(not pianos wit chorus, and flipped 12 million different ways), Drums(different types of course, Bongos, Snare, Tooms, Bass Drum, Cymbals), Guitars, etc.... It doesnt matter what you use, its how you play it, thats what made the difference between songs, not presets, presets dont matter, its how you use em.
Didnt know it was a law to making music now(besides an opinion based on if its hot or not, and its trillions people in the world, and one person doesnt speak for em all)
Blue Haze wrote:Check it we are talking about sampling. Playing music is your ear, technique, and rhythm you don`t need a sampler to play a piano. We play a piano we don`t flip a key unless you are detuning the thing or layering something on top of it. And if you are on the using a preset you do like all musicians did tune the keys and strike the keys to get the sound you want it is nuance that all musicians do so no two pianists don`t sound the same. Along with how you string it, mute it, the age of the instrument and so on.
If you want your own sound you tweak it like you want.

4dahaterz wrote:Blue Haze wrote:Check it we are talking about sampling. Playing music is your ear, technique, and rhythm you don`t need a sampler to play a piano. We play a piano we don`t flip a key unless you are detuning the thing or layering something on top of it. And if you are on the using a preset you do like all musicians did tune the keys and strike the keys to get the sound you want it is nuance that all musicians do so no two pianists don`t sound the same. Along with how you string it, mute it, the age of the instrument and so on.
If you want your own sound you tweak it like you want.
Basically, my point is, it doesnt matter if people use presets, its how they are played and used... maybe yall are tired of people playing the same presets the same way instead of playing them in their own style.

Askia Shaheed wrote:
As far as sound modules inside an MPC...that is a great idea. I can't understand why Akai or Roland wouldn't add this to the MPC or MV. It would be awesome if there was a 512MB Rom board integrated within (or an expansion) these machines that is packed withthousands of sampled waveforms/presets. This idea would be to make a table-top pad oriented workstation version of the Motif XS, Triton Studio, Fantom G, M3, etc. No loading...just turn on your MPC and have sounds at your finger tips and still have all your sample Ram

When I said I am not into deep programming, I meant that I will not be the one that samples 88 keys from a piano (software/hardware synth/sampler or even a real piano) into my MPC to create a keygroup.
Nor did I mean to imply that I pull up a synth/sampler presets and leave it alone. All the keygroup and layering sounds can be done on both hardware and software.
The same tweaks you can do onboard an MPC are the same you can tweak on a software synth/sampler...there is no difference with the exception that the software is more powerful. With a software sampler, you still have any sound you want.
You may be stuck on that idea that you can't sample when using software samplers. But Giga Studio and Emulator X both sample. For those software samplers that don't sample...simply use your DAW or wave editor (such as Wave Lab) and drag and drop the audio into you software sampler.
So we have settled this right? We agree that you can do the same MPC mangling with a preset and software samplers/synths?
As far as Akihabara..there wasn't one thing I can find to spend my money on. So I played with the Motif XS. I couldn't figure out how to chop and edit samples.
As far as sound modules inside an MPC...that is a great idea. I can't understand why Akai or Roland wouldn't add this to the MPC or MV. It would be awesome if there was a 512MB Rom board integrated within (or an expansion) these machines that is packed withthousands of sampled waveforms/presets. This idea would be to make a table-top pad oriented workstation version of the Motif XS, Triton Studio, Fantom G, M3, etc. No loading...just turn on your MPC and have sounds at your finger tips and still have all your sample Ram