![]() The resulting, somewhat mechanical, quality is a key feature of many dance music styles. These days we're used to hearing heavily produced music recorded to a strict, unchanging click. First, though, the topic for this month's DP workshop. You can check out the 'Five Goes Live' box elsewhere in this article for details, and see to keep up with availability. The big news for us from January's USA NAMM show is the forthcoming release of Digital Performer version 5, which - being due for release in "Q1 2006" - might even be out now. But DP offers many ways of breaking out, and this month we explore them, as well as bringing news of the major update that is Digital Performer 5. If you favour the feel of music that results from real people playing real instruments, the strict-tempo approach of a sequencer can feel like a straitjacket. Press down chord and use multiple times action 'Script: ReaperTonStepInsertOrModifyHeldNotesByGridRight.The Tempo Control pane of DP's main transport window is where you can switch your sequence over to Conductor Track control, to start exploiting some of the tempo-related powers of the program. Third bug without consistent reconstruction:ġ. > expected result: get the same behaviour for all midi notes, either 'continue' the previous note or create a new midi note. > sometimes some note continues (connects to the previous same midi note) without starting a new midi note while other notes create a new midi note repeat cycle multiple times to reproduce bug several times (on my setup it's like every third time) Press down same chord again and use action 'Script: a' and release chordģ. Second bug with quite consistent reconstruction:Ģ. > expected result: new midi note gets written in midi editor, not the erased one > on my side is result that only the last deleted midi note from previous chord gets written down after 3rd step Press down another note that did not belong to the previous chord and use action 'Script: a' and release note Press down only one midi note from previous chord and use action 'Script: a ' and release noteģ. Press down chord and use action 'Script: a' and release chordĢ. There are a few bugs I documented in the gif, so here is one, that can be replicated consistently on my setup:ġ. LE: Undo was fixed, pretty happy with the resultĬan you describe your gif, what were you doing, what you expected, what happened Unfortunately that is advance stuff witch I don't know at the moment. This most likely can be fixed using an extension by listening to the midi events. ![]() In the future I would like to create an full fledged extension.Īs an known issue, that I can't work around, is that notes with the same velocity will not be considered re-triggered and thus they will result in the lengthening of the previous note instead of adding a new one. (the original script had multiple functionalities)Īt the moment I'm still learning my way around Reaper and Lua so sorry if the code is a mess. I want to reproduce exactly what is happening in Ableton and nothing more. That adds, lengthens, shortens and removes notes base on forward backward cursor movement. Updates will come in the next weeks as I clean up, optimize and fix the mess :)Įnd goal is to have two action and a combined one for midi cc relative or mouse wheel. If I understood you correctly.Īt the moment it only works forward. So then, with your midi keys still held down, you can hit left / right arrow on your computer's keyboard to stretch the notes out (or shrink them) according to the grid division.Īctually ableton set them when you press the arrow keys not when release the midi, and the playhead just move with the arrows not by pressing the MIDI. Just to be clear, the way it works in Ableton is that as soon as you press midi notes it puts it on the piano roll, and moves the playhead to the end of these new notes BUT it doesn't "set" them until you actually release the midi key(s). ![]() With tentafour is not possible ableton is, and more fluid I must say, as I just need to focus on pressing the arrows not first iserting then drag. It makes a diference if you want to inset some note while dragging others. tentafour I need first to inset them using the scripts and then drag. One difference I notice using tentafour and ableton is that ableton you just need to play the notes and then press the arrows and it is done.
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