Midi Yoke NT : 1 until Midi Yoke NT : 8Magic wrote:What are they named ( Like yoke1 and so, or...)
Is cubasis inwired actually available for download?
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- KVRAF
- 1789 posts since 17 Mar, 2004 from Bretagne, the west of France
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 11 posts since 16 Jul, 2004 from Mexico City
Wow, ok, then I´ll give the yoke thing another try ( I have to reinstall it) and do a closer examination.
thank you bucodi. If I still have problems runing it can I bother with some how to questions...?
Magic
thank you bucodi. If I still have problems runing it can I bother with some how to questions...?
Magic
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- KVRAF
- 1789 posts since 17 Mar, 2004 from Bretagne, the west of France
No problem,
Be sure you have the latest version and the right one for your operating system. You can find it on
www.midiox.com
There is allso a step by step installation guide.
Good luck,
Rony
Be sure you have the latest version and the right one for your operating system. You can find it on
www.midiox.com
There is allso a step by step installation guide.
Good luck,
Rony
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- jaaathmaster
- 2690 posts since 1 Jun, 2001 from Marlow, S. Bucks, UK
Scuzzphut, you wagscuzzphut wrote:The only free host worth a damn is the version of Muzys that came *cough* free with Computer Music magazine.
Depends what you want. There's Music Studio Independence, which looks like a full featured linear sequencer, although it's a bit clunky looking:
http://www.kvr-vst.com/get/833.html
Or Pure Data...
http://puredata.info/about/
It has some third party piano roll modules, and pretty much anything else you can care to name.
http://ydegoyon.free.fr/software.html
Or you could use the free Bidule beta and some of the internal sequencing modules, etc.
Probably, for a cheap sequencer, Tracktion or EnergyXT are better bets though. Using MidiOX sounds like a horrible kludge, especially when it comes to bouncing to audio.
Music with dinner is an insult both to the cook and the violinist.
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- KVRAF
- 3723 posts since 17 Apr, 2002 from Scotland
I'm not sure I agree with you about energyXT , griels - you tosser.
energy XT is super powerful and a really nice piece of kit, granted. But I wouldn't recommend it to someone who wanted a cubase cut-down. I *would* recommend it to someone frustrated by the limitations of their host, however
energy XT is super powerful and a really nice piece of kit, granted. But I wouldn't recommend it to someone who wanted a cubase cut-down. I *would* recommend it to someone frustrated by the limitations of their host, however
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- KVRAF
- 2831 posts since 11 Jun, 2003
-edit- Oups.. it's already been mentioned.
Energy XT. It's almost free ( $40.00 ) and is a huge bargain at that price. Plus, if you decide to get another sequencer later on, you'll still be able to use Energy XT in it.
I agree that it's not as easy to use as other sequencers since the features change a lot and there is no manual... but it's very powerful..
Energy XT. It's almost free ( $40.00 ) and is a huge bargain at that price. Plus, if you decide to get another sequencer later on, you'll still be able to use Energy XT in it.
I agree that it's not as easy to use as other sequencers since the features change a lot and there is no manual... but it's very powerful..
Play it by ear
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- jaaathmaster
- 2690 posts since 1 Jun, 2001 from Marlow, S. Bucks, UK
Yeah... It seems pretty advanced now, with audio tracks and pretty sophistimacated midi editing and that. It has a 'paradigm' though, so it might just be for us southern softie Sassenachspheeleep wrote:Y might want to consider Energy XT. It's almost free ( $40.00 ) and is a huge bargain at that price. Plus, if you decide to get another sequencer later on, you'll still be able to use Energy XT in it.
Music with dinner is an insult both to the cook and the violinist.
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 11 posts since 16 Jul, 2004 from Mexico City
Cool,...This forum just keeps on breeding solutions and answers even while you sleep...
I'll test out all proposals here, chances are I'll find something usefull for one thing or the other anyway. Thanks you guys, and as to the timeless and everongoing disscussion about "good software- bad software": in my experience it's not really about the tools but what you do (can or know how to) with them.
Some people hate going thru steep learning curves so they stick to what they know, others, like me, love to spend more time tweaking knobs and drawing controller lines than actually making music. I guess I could say, for an individual the best software is the one he likes the best, and the beaty of your PC lies actually in the fact that(in theory) you can have them all work and live together in peace and harmony, side by side in your workstation, oh lord why don't weee... (its tequila hour in house if your wondering bout my faculties)
I'll test out all proposals here, chances are I'll find something usefull for one thing or the other anyway. Thanks you guys, and as to the timeless and everongoing disscussion about "good software- bad software": in my experience it's not really about the tools but what you do (can or know how to) with them.
Some people hate going thru steep learning curves so they stick to what they know, others, like me, love to spend more time tweaking knobs and drawing controller lines than actually making music. I guess I could say, for an individual the best software is the one he likes the best, and the beaty of your PC lies actually in the fact that(in theory) you can have them all work and live together in peace and harmony, side by side in your workstation, oh lord why don't weee... (its tequila hour in house if your wondering bout my faculties)
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 11 posts since 16 Jul, 2004 from Mexico City
total posotive confirmation on that my lad, got it up and running finally and uninstallit after one night of testing, horror scenes one after the other; latency; worst I've seen ever, craks and pops, aplication shutdowns, crashes, you name it...griels wrote:scuzzphut wrote: Using MidiOX sounds like a horrible kludge, especially when it comes to bouncing to audio.
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- Banned
- 96 posts since 19 Aug, 2001 from Manchester
In case anybody's interested (highly unlikely!) the Japanese version of Music Studio Independence 1.20b is out (not sure how long it's been out now), but the English version is still at 1.13. I can't tell what the differences are so far, as it's all gobbledegook on the Japanese version, except that the song mixer window now shows track activity by highlighting the track number, and has a volume meter for each track as well. Basically it looks great (IMO) and if only all sequencers were this well designed!griels wrote:Scuzzphut, you wagscuzzphut wrote:The only free host worth a damn is the version of Muzys that came *cough* free with Computer Music magazine.![]()
Depends what you want. There's Music Studio Independence, which looks like a full featured linear sequencer, although it's a bit clunky looking:
http://www.kvr-vst.com/get/833.html
