(/quote]Soundloop wrote:zerocrossing wrote: I had a G10 that did pretty well but you had to pick it really hard.
I've had a GI-10 for years, since they first came out. A couple of months ago my keyboard (which was the main controller for my studio), went up in a puff of smoke. AGGGGHH! What to do? Funds are very tight right now.... Well, it's amazing sometimes how limitations can force you into something better.
It turns out that my precious Roland keyboard blowing up was one of the best musical things to happen to me. I got the GI-10 back out, dusted it off and spent quite some time setting it up just so on my Warmoth Strat (the neck on that thing is to die for, one of the best investments I ever made). I have to say, the Roland GI-10 pitch to MIDI system FLIES when it's set up perfectly!
This is just me, but I don't expect it to be a "live" instrument. There's always going to be a few lag or glitch issues, but they are surprisingly small and few. They are also surprisingly quick to clean up in Cubases' editing view.
I love this thing now. I have a very fast and responsive MIDI controller that works with my favorite guitar. Not enough can be said for "feel" while you are playing, and I wouldn't trade my Warmoth for any other guitar.
Basically, with my "new" (10 year old), system, I can't stop playing it now every spare second I have.
The second thing that made it work for me was changing my approach. It is NEVER going to be a guitar type instrument that plays screaming bendy rock licks. Think about it, how many people play keyboards that rely on BENDING for every other note? It does follow bends very accurately, but for musical reasons, with most playing I use it for discrete pitch steps only.
Also, what made a huge difference was having the guitar plugged into an amp (clean) while I am sequencing. I just play to the click, with the MIDI tracking very low in the background. What a difference! This has forced me to analyze and clean up my playing further. 98% of the glitches have turned out to be user error.
When you can play every note PRECISELY using the the amp and the click, you get a very accurate track that keeps the feel. This also get's rid of any lag that may be throwing you off.
You also need to study how other instruments are approached. Try playing and voicing like a flute or a piano, instead of the guitar phrases you would normally play. Anyways, before I ramble on any further - the combination of my pitch to MIDI guitar WITH the tools in Cubase have allowed me to play stuff with electronic instruments I could only dream about in my head before. You just have to get used to a process that requires a little thinking ahead and a little cleaning up with what you played AFTER THE FACT. Pianos, synths, they are all mine now. It just took more work to get there, but now chords, voicing and scales are available to me second nature from brain to string.
I'm really happy with this system, even inspite of the occasional frustrations. Losing my keyboard and being forced to adapt to MIDI guitar (I'm not really a keyboard player anyway) has changed the way I can compose by about a million percent.
I've also noticed that sometimes less is more with electronic instruments. Playing busy and fast sometimes just sounds like clutter when you have a huge harmonic spectrum to push around. Simplified chords and melodies sometimes just sound a lot better, than if you heard them played on a guitar.
Having owned a Beetle Quantar in the past (it fell apart....)what I am salivating for now is that Fret-X system. Please God, let them get this to market before the technology disappears again...
