How do you extract midi from the sample?
If I open up the sample in Trim mode and activate Chop (non destructive chop) in the upper field I can:
- Adjust start/end of each chop
- Zoom in/zoom out
- Reverse (this is for monitoring only I guess)
- Slice (if I don't want to do everything manually)
- Create a new program with samples that equals the chops
That's it. How would you extract the timing of the audioevents into midi events on a sequence track?
I mean, I understand that I can access the slices by midi note number but I want the timing from the original groove converted to midi events playing these notes(like Recycle).
bliprock wrote:I do not know about ableton. But if you turn on NDC and make it a program, then make it midi it does just what you are saying right. i mean i can bang out on midi keyboard the chops of the NDC program. And I can use midi TC as well. So maybe you should try it that way. THat is what you are missing IMO. So just get that drum loop sample or what ever turn on the NDC. And you will see that in fact if you get two samples that say are a bar long and use NDC with same amount of chops (as the number of chops can be changed) and you get the same division right. Now I would just make program of the NDCs and you can then swap em round in the sequence. But you have to use sequence to set groove, which is better IMHO. but yeah the NDC chop to program gives you chop to midi note number. And well I have no issue setting my chops by hand and do not like ever really have the exact same chop right, so as I say if they are similar bar and set to same NDC number of chops it is like a template and is very close. In fact might as well be same. Pattern to pad gives you a sequence from a track so you could make a pad trigger a pattern of the chop. easy. And just change program for what you are saying. every hit in pattern is a pad/midi note. so can be transposed, changed and edited to get what you are saying. So make two sequences tracks to patterns, so you can hear your chop, say every chop in a row so you can hear the chops play as originally intended, and one pattern for your chop pattern you want. So does not matter what sample of a bar you put in the NDC program it will be pretty close to the same.