Howdy,
I've been having fun with db. Thanks again.
Another idea, if it's possible, would be the ability to input beats in real time, say, to choose one voice and then be able to click or touch a letter key while a click track keeps time. I remember this feature from the old Linndrum machines. You could set it to either 'snap to grid', so to speak, putting the beats into the nearest chosen subdivision (the 'quantize' feature) or set it to allow the beats to play exactly as they are entered in real time. Hey, maybe you could assign voices to different letter keys, so as to be able to input more than one sound at a time, in real time. Possible?
Keep up the good work.
Ryk A. Groetchen windrag@earthlink.net
On 01,08,02 at 9:24 pm -0400, Ryk Groetchen wrote:
Another idea, if it's possible, would be the ability to input beats in real time, say, to choose one voice and then be able to click or touch a letter key while a click track keeps time. I remember this feature from the old Linndrum machines. You could set it to either 'snap to grid', so to speak, putting the beats into the nearest chosen subdivision (the 'quantize' feature) or set it to allow the beats to play exactly as they are entered in real time. Hey, maybe you could assign voices to different letter keys, so as to be able to input more than one sound at a time, in real time. Possible?
Hmmmm.... I like these ideas a bunch... thanks! Adding to the future- feature list... 8)
-b
On Thursday, August 1, 2002, at 09:34 PM, Ben Kennedy wrote:
You could set it to either 'snap to grid', so to speak, putting the beats into the nearest chosen subdivision (the 'quantize' feature) or set it to allow the beats to play exactly as they are entered in real time. Hey, maybe you could assign voices to different letter keys, so as to be able to input more than one sound at a time, in real time. Possible?
This is what I have been so ineptly trying to describe to a `T`
(thank you Ryk for saying what i was too stupid to get out) -- Lou Moran http://ellem.dyn.dhs.org:5281/resume/lmoran2002.html