Re: [linux-audio-user] Re: Doing Drums

From: Dana Olson <dana@email-addr-hidden>
Date: Fri Apr 21 2006 - 10:47:31 EEST

On Fri, 2006-04-21 at 13:12 +1000, Loki Davison wrote:
> On 4/21/06, Loki Davison <loki.davison@email-addr-hidden> wrote:
> > On 4/21/06, BJaY <BJaY@email-addr-hidden-mail.net> wrote:
> > > I trying to figure out a method of doing contemporary drums, where I can
> > > edit in a matrix like environment but then get separate Jack outputs for
> > > each drum to allow for DSP'ing. I currently use Rosegarden synced to
> > Ardour.
> > > Rosegarden will not allow splitting notes to different channels - though
> > > Muse does, but that means I have to run both (I don't know if they'll
> > play
> > > happy together). I revisited hydrogen again recently, but it won't load
> > gig
> > > or sf2, as far as I can see (Has some nice kits though). I like the idea
> > of
> > > using Linuxsampler to do drums but I can't see a way of directing one
> > drum
> > > to one engine / output and another to another. I feel like there is a
> > simple
> > > solution here that I'm missing, it must be a very common requirement in
> > > digital audio. Anyone got any suggestions ?
> > >
> > > Cheers,
> > >
> > > Bruce.
> >
> > Seq24 is quite a nice pattern sequencer for drums. I use it with smack
> > (synthed drums) and hydrogen (sampled drums).
> >
> > Loki
> >
>
> oh, and everything else. Seq24 is great. ;-)

I like Seq24, it reminds me a bit of my Yamaha RM1x.. But one issue I
have with it, it seems to skip the first note of each loop.. if it's on
the first beat. (And many other feature requests I have submitted, but
I'm useless so I can't help improve it myself at this time).

Dana

Received on Fri Apr 21 12:15:03 2006

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Fri Apr 21 2006 - 12:15:03 EEST