Izotope buys BT's Sonik Architects (Stutter Edit now Released!)
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- KVRist
- 227 posts since 25 Jan, 2008
So there's no MIDI learn allowing you to assign different control parameters to your MIDI controller? Not very real-time friendly, if that's the case.
Has anyone tried using envelope clips in Ableton Live to control parameters?
Has anyone tried using envelope clips in Ableton Live to control parameters?
All instruments are artificial
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el-bo (formerly ebow) el-bo (formerly ebow) https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=208007
- KVRAF
- 17927 posts since 24 May, 2009 from A galaxy, far far away
are you serious ?? it's only $249 dollars...you guys want the worldaMUSEd wrote:
What were they thinking? It's essential.
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- KVRian
- 1439 posts since 25 Nov, 2008 from Seattle, WA
I think some people are confused. You can't automate individual parameters but you control the effect with MIDI. So you can do a lot already. Just not fine tuning.
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Echoes in the Attic Echoes in the Attic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=180417
- KVRAF
- 11998 posts since 12 May, 2008
We're not really confused though. You can have midi assignments on gesture length (or buffer override or whatever) and master filter which are by default mapped to pitch wheel and mod wheel. That doesn't help using in Kore or any number of host mappings though which are far more useful. So you can't use it for example on the APC40 with the selected device in ableton or in Maschine 1.6 you won't be able to map these to macros, and you can't use Kore with it properly etc. Another example - In Kore I like to make an instrument that has an instrument plug-in over part of the keyrange and then a midi effect like effectrix over the top part of a keyrange, so you can play the instrument and trigger effects with the same keyboard. If I did this with stutter edit I can't assign the controls in kore, I have to use the pitch wheel and mod wheel which would mean I'd have to disable those to the instrument. Lame.aircargo wrote:I think some people are confused. You can't automate individual parameters but you control the effect with MIDI. So you can do a lot already. Just not fine tuning.
- KVRAF
- 3878 posts since 28 Jun, 2009 from Wherever I lay my hat
Erm... maybe I'm being deliberately dense here, but when "recording", you don't record the audio, you "record" the midi keys.aMUSEd wrote:Are they insane? How can you record what you play in realtime without host automation? Do they expect everyone to record straight to audio? This would also make it impossible to use in Kore.
I wonder how many of those who are griping about the lack of automation actually took the time to work with the demo. I used it all over a gig yesterday, and it was great. Used a dedicated Akai MPK Mini to trigger the effects and tweak the buffer and filter. Worked like a charm, and there was no stutter fatigue involved.
- KVRAF
- 37378 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Nope - I would usually want to record the slider movements (usually done using Kore but that won't work either so it would have to be using a mouse) while I play an instrument through the effect using my midi keys.ariston wrote:Erm... maybe I'm being deliberately dense here, but when "recording", you don't record the audio, you "record" the midi keys.aMUSEd wrote:Are they insane? How can you record what you play in realtime without host automation? Do they expect everyone to record straight to audio? This would also make it impossible to use in Kore.
- KVRAF
- 3878 posts since 28 Jun, 2009 from Wherever I lay my hat
I do get what you're saying - yet you were inferring that it's not possible to "record" what you're playing without host automation. This is just not true - I simply use a second keyboard for triggering the effects and record the midi output from that, which for all practical purposes boils down to "recording the automation".aMUSEd wrote:Nope - I would usually want to record the slider movements (usually done using Kore but that won't work either so it would have to be using a mouse) while I play an instrument through the effect using my midi keys.
While I can see (and like) the advantages of supporting automation in general, I just question the fact whether Stutter Edit in particular NEEDS it. My answer is: no, definitely not. It spices up tracks with great one-shots, and it accomplishes this particularly well. And, like I said, I really wonder if anyone would actually want to submit their listeners to a minute of manually-tweaked stutter torture. These effects need to be administered in small doses, otherwise they turn to cheese instantly - IMO. Your personal CO2-balance may vary.
I have no idea why I'm championing this plugin so much (I'm not on the payroll - wish I was) - maybe it's the fact that some people seem intent on putting it down for what it's not, instead of taking it for what it is: an instant put-a-smile-on-your-face funbox with a great sound and gobs of creative possibilities.
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Sampleconstruct Sampleconstruct https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=191286
- KVRAF
- 16732 posts since 12 Oct, 2008 from Here and there
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Echoes in the Attic Echoes in the Attic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=180417
- KVRAF
- 11998 posts since 12 May, 2008
It's completely true what amused and I are saying, for all parameters except gesture length and master filter (which can be midi assigned). Pressing a button does not boil down to "recording automation" at all, it really boils down to recording midi notes which are triggers for complete actions. Tell me how you would map delay length to a kore control or any hardware at all? Or automate it? or a lo-fi parameter or anything else. I get what you're saying that it's useful as is, but I like to do as much manually as possible, it makes me feel like I'm really playing an instrument and recording movements using knobs etc. rather than simply pressing a button and have everything done for me.ariston wrote:I do get what you're saying - yet you were inferring that it's not possible to "record" what you're playing without host automation. This is just not true - I simply use a second keyboard for triggering the effects and record the midi output from that, which for all practical purposes boils down to "recording the automation".aMUSEd wrote:Nope - I would usually want to record the slider movements (usually done using Kore but that won't work either so it would have to be using a mouse) while I play an instrument through the effect using my midi keys.
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Slinky Productions Slinky Productions https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=246619
- Banned
- 160 posts since 29 Dec, 2010
+1Echoes in the Attic wrote:It's completely true what amused and I are saying, for all parameters except gesture length and master filter (which can be midi assigned). Pressing a button does not boil down to "recording automation" at all, it really boils down to recording midi notes which are triggers for complete actions. Tell me how you would map delay length to a kore control or any hardware at all? Or automate it? or a lo-fi parameter or anything else. I get what you're saying that it's useful as is, but I like to do as much manually as possible, it makes me feel like I'm really playing an instrument and recording movements using knobs etc. rather than simply pressing a button and have everything done for me.ariston wrote:I do get what you're saying - yet you were inferring that it's not possible to "record" what you're playing without host automation. This is just not true - I simply use a second keyboard for triggering the effects and record the midi output from that, which for all practical purposes boils down to "recording the automation".aMUSEd wrote:Nope - I would usually want to record the slider movements (usually done using Kore but that won't work either so it would have to be using a mouse) while I play an instrument through the effect using my midi keys.
I never understand why people will tirelessly argue against other users who ask for an improvement. Why argue against something that makes the software better ?
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- KVRian
- 533 posts since 2 Jan, 2003 from Staffs, UK
I don't think its the case all the time as I'm assuming people are suggesting that there isn't a need for the automation, or work-arounds etc. I'm not sure I would feel the need for host automation as you can preset your effects to various keys and trigger that way for the majority of the time (or so it seems to me, anyway) but your right, another way won't harm anything hopefully, so yeah, why not????Slinky Productions wrote:I never understand why people will tirelessly argue against other users who ask for an improvement. Why argue against something that makes the software better ?
Also people may thing that adding new or missing features might delay a 'bug-fix release' which they might be waiting for and might argue such a case but I doubt people would go so far as suggesting ideas are bad just to be spiteful??? Dunno, maybe I'm just hoping that humanity isn't quite dead yet......
Errr, anyway having made some comments on this plug earlier in the thread 'before' I tried it, I would like to back track a little as having now tried the demo version, I have to say that this is very, very good imo. Still way too expensive but imo, it does back up the high price with a high quality, fun product. I'm pissed cos I'll not have the cash for it for a while and then at $250 I will probably talk myself out of it. Who knows but I do like it.
I still have issues with the claim of him (BT) inventing the 'stutter edit' as a production technique but errr, good job BT & Izotope and lets hope that the creative people of the world get to use it and it it stays off the radar of lazy, wealthy producers who will most likely kill us with it on some Gaga or Britney shitwad.......
PS Talking of Britney, her latest track goes 'very' Dubstep a couple of minutes in.....WTF!!!!!! c**ts like that need not to know of SE's existence.
Peace.
No, that Glitch is meant to be there.....
http://soundcloud.com/punisha
http://www.myspace.com/punishadubs
http://soundcloud.com/punisha
http://www.myspace.com/punishadubs
- KVRAF
- 3878 posts since 28 Jun, 2009 from Wherever I lay my hat
...everything "done for you" which you've prepared beforehand by programming and using the effect to your liking. It's that thing with iron in it, right?Echoes in the Attic wrote:... but I like to do as much manually as possible, it makes me feel like I'm really playing an instrument and recording movements using knobs etc. rather than simply pressing a button and have everything done for me.
The important phrase in my post was "for all practical porpoises".

Yes, you can record your inputs, and you're not forced to go straight to audio, which is why amused's statement is not "completely true". It's misleading.
@slinky dude: I don't think automation would make this product "better", in the same way that I think a big wooden casing, some hammers, additional strings and 88 keys wouldn't make a guitar "better". I don't think it needs it, because it's not that type of effect. There are enough alternatives for that. Buy those if that's what you want. I felt that SE offers something that those others don't, which is why I bought it. Your body mass index may vary.
Ahh, well, that's enough of that. I for one hope that Izotope will devote their resources to additional effects modules rather than host automation.
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Echoes in the Attic Echoes in the Attic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=180417
- KVRAF
- 11998 posts since 12 May, 2008
You are missing the point. If you program a keyboard passage meticulously in a midi clip and trigger it with a button, are playing keyboard? No. I'm talking about actually adjusting parameters on the fly. You are talking about programming parameter changes beforehand and triggering them. Different things.ariston wrote:...everything "done for you" which you've prepared beforehand by programming and using the effect to your liking. It's that thing with iron in it, right?Echoes in the Attic wrote:... but I like to do as much manually as possible, it makes me feel like I'm really playing an instrument and recording movements using knobs etc. rather than simply pressing a button and have everything done for me.
If you like to work that way that's cool, stutter edit isn't missing anything you want. But how you can claim that it's no different and automation/hardware mapping are unneeded because you can press a key, that's beyond me.
You're right that you're not forced to go directly to audio but that's not the important part of the point. The important thing is that you can not automate parameters besides the main two and you can not map them to hardware controls in any way and there is NO workaround for that. This is not a special feature, this should be standard functionality of any plug-in.ariston wrote: Yes, you can record your inputs, and you're not forced to go straight to audio, which is why amused's statement is not "completely true". It's misleading.
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Slinky Productions Slinky Productions https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=246619
- Banned
- 160 posts since 29 Dec, 2010
absolutely, 100%Echoes in the Attic wrote:The important thing is that you can not automate parameters besides the main two and you can not map them to hardware controls in any way and there is NO workaround for that. This is not a special feature, this should be standard functionality of any plug-in.
- KVRAF
- 3878 posts since 28 Jun, 2009 from Wherever I lay my hat
My last post on this (I promiseEchoes in the Attic wrote:You're right that you're not forced to go directly to audio but that's not the important part of the point. The important thing is that you can not automate parameters besides the main two and you can not map them to hardware controls in any way and there is NO workaround for that. This is not a special feature, this should be standard functionality of any plug-in.
There are other effects out there that can do what you apparently want SE to do. It's different, and I'm not only glad for that, but feel that it's kind of silly and unprofitable to lambaste it for something it's not. And by the way, it's rock-solid, sounds great, the workflow is fun and easy, and the preset browser pure joy. So easy to set up a bank. I'm saying this so that the things that make SE great won't get left out of the picture here.
And, somehow, I still can't shake the feeling that none of you have actually given the demo a fair shot.
Now, let's all fire up whatever floats our personal boat and make some music.

