Heh-heh....I guess you haven't tried Stylus RMX yet?Krakatau wrote:I agree...Cap'n Spanky wrote:PLUS... you can change the timing of when different slices sound. In other words, you can change the groove of a rex file (not just the tempo). This is huge in my book.
I'm wondering actually on how accurate can be the combination of time stetching algorithm applied on REX files that have groove manipulations as main target
I knew an application called Alkali ( discontinued i think ) that was targeted on groove manipulation based with REX files, but without time-stretching algo...
I noticed ( only noticed, i'm a dinosaur still working on macos9 ! ) that a few loop-based samplers includes time stretch in their features,
what i'd like to know is how deep this concept of groove manipulation has been developped at the present time
I expect that, apart from the stretch/crunch engines, they are other simple treatments that can contribute to the purpose like changing volume or high frequencies on a single slice to modify it own character from the original groove ( smooth a previous accent and create another one somewhere else in the final, modified groove, for instance )...eventually compression/expansion applied on single slices, etc...
You can do all of this kind of stuff in the RMX engine (and much more too!), because it relies on the REX style method of slicing.
http://www.spectrasonics.net/instruments/stylusrmx.html
The internal sounds of RMX take the concept of REX further with our method of development - called Groove Control®

