I agree with you that music does not need to conform to a machines clock. All I was intending to say is that just because others use a tool in a limited way does not mean that the tool is necessarily limited in that way and that the next person has to do the same. With experience and imagination a miriad of different ways of working with such tools can be had.
I can imagine that you have bucket loads of experience compared to me by virtue of forum posts I have read that you are included in. The first instrument that I bought was a harmonica. At the time I did not think I would persevere with something like a guitar. Since then I have managed to learn circular breathing and can now play the didgeridoo in a limited way. Audio software wise I first bought Dance Ejay. The last software daw I bought was Cubase SL 1. I have Fruity lifetime upgrades so I do check those out. So I have grown some but not necessarily grown up. I see you mention C4 with timeline warp and now understand what you mean by making the timeline useful. Your mention of timeline warp ties in quite nicely with another thread I was reading yesterday about the merits or not of working with a metronome.
Have fun
Mark
jancivil wrote:I'm talking about making the timeline useful per se. Rather than what was done in the other video, which doesn't sound like live music, in all likelihood following the fact it was done via midi conforming to a flat tempo for a long time. There is a better M.O. for orchestral music, that is a serious limitation imposed by a design which isn't up to the job really. You're not really dealing with what I wrote, but reacting to it. There is something to learn from it, which is why I went to the trouble.stonestreet wrote:Just because there is a grid does not mean that you have to use it. You can use these daws as glorified tape recorders. What stops anybody from recording straight into the audio editor without any regard for the bpm or the grid.
I am not sure whether my memory serves me well, I think that when I first got Fruity Loops 3 it was similar to Reason in the sense that you could automate anything whilst recording. I have not done so but I think that you could automate the bpm during recording in song mode.
In fact, what I do typically is record <without any regard for the bpm or the grid>, but should there come a point where I need a useful bars and beats, for scoring other parts, I have those which conform to what I recorded via this tool.
