I was referring to Synfire's "phrases", which are independent of bar-length. In fact, they can be independent of particular notes, letting you apply different rhythms, scales, and harmonies to the original phrase. That mirrors how I would compose at an instrument, but eliminates all the grunt work and just lets you focus on the musical result. It's great to take a phrase or lick or rhythm or chord change, then expand and develop it from any angle of music theory - harmony, rhythm, note-manipulation (retrograde, inversion), etc.dsan@mail.com wrote:Your final statement though puzzles me, "But I already feel much freer than with the clip-based approach of Live/Bitwig, which expects and encourages music to fit in cubes, N bars long."
Are the containers in Synfire not the same thing? Cubes (or more like rectangles) for fitting N bars long?
The software is really overly complex. I mean, it looks great to do what it does, but it could be MUCH more simplified. Actually, it looks like it has been simplified a bit since its conception. Or maybe now I get it![]()
Yes, the "containers" are N bars long. But that feels right rather than confining, since I think of them as whole sections of the piece. They can be copied, aliased, etc, which I really like when working with the top level structure. That stage, for me, always comes after I've already got some motif or pattern and have figured out how to develop it - usually the hardest part.
I am still in the learning phase, so I won't be able to say whether it is too complex until I really understand it all