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-- All In One Hardware Sequencer?
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i have a beard , i must be musical.
i had a roland mc 80 in like 1999 or something. Was retarded expensive i remember.
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney i have a beard , i must use Ableton Live in the forest with some analog |
I have a Cirklon, no need for any Pyramids, woods or beards 
We know, we know 
Goods good though, affordable too
I assume you mean looks good?
It does, although I'm not inclined to spend moolah on a heavily software dependent product from an unproven manufacturer who is claiming to be doing only a short initial run.
I know the Cirklon is the same kind of deal, but that dude already had product/form as I understand it.
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| Originally posted by AlphaStarred Just ordered a Korg ER-1, myself. I hear it's actually analog? Or is it just analog-modeling? Anyway, it's pretty damned cheap and has some nice features, including being a MIDI step sequencer and containing an Audio In input to process whatever other machine you want and filter it with the various fx. Should be interesting, hopefully, and I hear it's great for tekno. http://www.vintagesynth.com/korg/etr.php Used to have the ES-1 model, which I used for samples. Great little fun machine; don't let the plastic casing fool you. |

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| Originally posted by DJ RANN That little box is so much fun. Really good for that detroit techno sound but the best part is just the fun you have with them, whether it's playing live to record, manually programming or step programming. Hours of noodling there. |
We'll see what iboga does to me in the following days, and if it brings me back to my "normal" self, I might even stop producing altogether, however...
Analog drum machine?
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| Originally posted by AlphaStarred For sure. Looking forward to tweaking and filtering its instruments real-time and recording them as patterns, which is one of the best features of this machine. Might have to get the ES-1 again and upload some Alien movie samples again and go nuts. We'll see what iboga does to me in the following days, and if it brings me back to my "normal" self, I might even stop producing altogether, however... |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by AlphaStarred Just ordered a Korg ER-1, myself. I hear it's actually analog? Or is it just analog-modeling? Anyway, it's pretty damned cheap and has some nice features, including being a MIDI step sequencer and containing an Audio In input to process whatever other machine you want and filter it with the various fx. Should be interesting, hopefully, and I hear it's great for tekno. http://www.vintagesynth.com/korg/etr.php Used to have the ES-1 model, which I used for samples. Great little fun machine; don't let the plastic casing fool you. |
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| Originally posted by TranceElevation This one is a great suggestion Alpha. I'm slowly immersing my self into the world of analog drum machines. And preparing a budget for the big analog buy. 5000� at my disposal. Please suggest more similar options. |
I'm evaluating still. Don't know how things will turn. Surely I wanna have some certainties before acquiring anything I might regret on a later stage. Still not sure if it is worth it. Many of these classic analog hats/hits have been sampled and delivered comfortably in a modern wav. format.
Synths I will be purchasing for sure, that's decided already. However, for drum machines, I'm evaluating.
Can't really go wrong with the older tribes. I got my ES1 for �50. You can pick any model up for less than $100 now. The EMX or ESX go for about $200 to $400 and again, it's not a big hit if you decide you don't like them, but honestly, I've never met anyone that said they hated them.
Either way, they are so low cost that if you don't like them, it's no big loss and you'll probably get back what you paid for them.
I were leaning towards the TR-8, but it seems like you can't load your own samples. In that case I will pass.
Any advice for a contemporary drum machine that let's you do that?
Maschine is not an option for me. Too cumbersome for my taste.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by TranceElevation I were leaning towards the TR-8, but it seems like you can't load your own samples. In that case I will pass. Any advice for a contemporary drum machine that let's you do that? |
maschine is shit. i am selling mine currently and just took delivery of a korg volca bass, and have a beats on order.
i came to the conclusion that there really isn't an all-in-one box these days. the old EMX is the closest, but there are issues there. was disappointed to learn the new electribes was castrated it terms of programming.
there will always be something important that an all-in-one box wont do, so you probably need to look at the right pairing of two bits of hardware that compliment each other well.
the volcas are quite simple, but a TR8 would be my drum machine of choice for something serious. you can get a volca sample for �100, i don't know if the volca bass or keys would be fully featured enough everyone's personal needs.
having never used an analogue synth, i was blown away by the inexpensive volca bass.
ableton push seems complex and like it would be very configurable. don't like it aesthetically though.
Why is the Maschine bad?
the workflow. absolute shit.
well documented as obtuse, unnecessarily so.
it SOUNDS great.
Yeah, I don't know anything about it, but I did hear it sounds great.
I played with a Maschine at a friends a little while back and have to admit, although the thing sounded fucking GREAT, the integration with a computer was so alien I couldn't get my head around it.
The ES-1 isn't great if you really want to use tons of samples. You have to convert them to 16bit 32k (WTF) and load them via smartmedia (card WTFBBQ). Thankfully some nice geeky chaps made some free programs to batch convert and name them so at least the tough part is done in seconds.
The only problem then is that you only have access to 99 samples at a time, to be used on 8 parts, so basically a choice of 11 or 12 samples per sound. 2 of these are stereo, 6 mono.
However, what i have been working on (and not really given it enough time yet) is a midi map so that the parts buttons correspond to pads within battery in your daw. Thankfully you can assign a note value to each part and then you just have to make each one correspond to battery's appropriate cells. The only problem with this is that the note value may well have nothing to do with the actual pitch of the note, especailly when you use the pitch knob on the tribe to raise or lower the pitch of the sample for drum tuning.
So basically as long as you are OK accepting the notes in the midi region are not real, then you basically have a great drum sampler controller for your DAW.
The only other tiny downsides are two things:
1, The tribe cuts off (truncates) the a mono sample when a stereo smaple is triggered. This isn;t the downside as such - it's actually really cool and can be used for really getting a good groove going - I've even uploaded silent samples in to that before to use it to "close" the tail on a mono sample. unfortunately, it only exists in the hardware itself so won't happen if you're using this as a controller.
2, It's minute, but there is a slight difference in groove between the tribe playing a loop by itself, and having your computer fire the midi to the tribe.
The only way i can describe it like having a black drummer play your groove, then asking a white guy to play the same thing.

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