xparis001 wrote:1. after discussion with several producers, the function buttons are the ones most used when working. The shift functions are for the ones that are less used. This final list was actually the work of Bruce Forat. The thought is that people bounce into song mode, render as sequences and keep going, so one button access is nice, where if someone's sampling, they usually enter the mode, record a bunch of samples, then leave, so a shift function is ok.
A shift function is definitely not "ok". You, your producer mates and Borat are wrong on this one.
Firstly, most MPCs have a dedicated button to enter the sample screen. It's there for a good reason. If you're skimming through a pile of records and land on a good sample, you cue the record back with one hand and enter sampling mode with the other hand. 2 handed operation. Economy of motion. Simple.
What's immediately obvious from the screenshots is that the shift and sample record button are 5 or 6 inches apart on the Ren! With a 'typical' right-handed beatmaker (85-90% of us) who
also have our sampling sources to right of the MPC, this leaves us with an arthritis-inducing double button press with one hand, or we are forced into using 2 hands for one function. Both not good.
At least on the 2KXL there was only an inch between the shift and number 4 button so it was no bother. The newer MPCs operate half way between the two ways of working, because you could hit mode... then a pad. You can still do that with one finger.
I don't buy this idea that people enter sampling mode, "record a bunch of samples, then leave" one bit either.
The beauty of the MPC way of working is the fluidity between different modes... taking a sample, bouncing into Trim, then Program, back to the Main screen, drop a quick sequence, hear it loop while you're needle dropping through a record, back into the Sample screen etc etc.
You are compromising the workflow by relegating it to a secondary function IMO. On a sampler as large as the Ren it's just daft to not have a dedicated sample record button. Not only that, but you have TWO buttons for Song mode!
Let me just state, this is not about the time spent on any one function, it's about cold hard ergonomics and optimum workflow when we are physically taking samples. 2 buttons that are 6 inches apart but need to be pressed together is ludicrous.
xparis001 wrote:2. there will be a master list, but when you load in a vst, that vst is added to a quick list, and added to the project browser on the left. you can drag and drop if from there on any track you want. you can then save that whole project as a file or make it your autoload. so in theory, you could have many different super-sets of plugins, depending on your need.
That sounds pretty good actually. The ability to save those quick lists as presets would be very useful.
