Thanks, and to you.wagtunes wrote: Merry Christmas my friend.
Can't comment on Hexeract, but, i always thought loop playback was somewhat of a standard thing for samplers too.
Thanks, and to you.wagtunes wrote: Merry Christmas my friend.
Except you can't even sustain a note. Every sample loads as a one shot.EvilDragon wrote:So that's pretty much how Omnisphere 2 or Serum do it. No multisamples. No biggie, not the first time that happened.
The file sizes of their proprietary format aren't even that small. One sample I saw was 36 meg. There's all of just 124 samples that come with this thing at it still runs over a gig.goldenhelix wrote:That does sound pretty lame. I don't know why they decided to use a proprietary format... seems like actually MORE work for them than if they had just used .wav files like every other sampler in the universe. I guess it's probably because of their own compression, which they claim reduces file size quite a bit, but it just doesn't seem like it'd be worth it to me.
Kinda glad I decided not to buy it, even if it looks cool. I would have been annoyed at the lack of this "feature" (not sure looping audio should be considered a feature in 2017).
Creating loops isn't the problem. I'm able to do that just fine with tons of stuff, as it turns out. The problem is this piece of crap doesn't read loops...AT ALL.thecontrolcentre wrote:I use Live or Sound Forge to create loops. Never had any trouble ...
Not much of help as the problem remains: Hexeract can''t read your loop points out.thecontrolcentre wrote:I use Live or Sound Forge to create loops. Never had any trouble ...
Serum isn't trying to be a sampler, it just happens to use sample playback for the "noise" generator, so it's a poor comparison.EvilDragon wrote:So that's pretty much how Omnisphere 2 or Serum do it. No multisamples. No biggie, not the first time that happened.
Well said.yellowmix wrote:
Auddict doesn't want it to be that deep a sampler and I get it. But I do hope Auddict reconsiders, given the position it's trying to play in the marketplace. The sampler engine it sits on is capable of it, and exposing such capabilities would solidify a position. .
Also, Sound Forge at least would not be suitable as a one-stop shop for making multi-samples, with different key-zones and velocity-zones. Here, we really need dedicated tools.murnau wrote:Not much of help as the problem remains: Hexeract can''t read your loop points out.thecontrolcentre wrote:I use Live or Sound Forge to create loops. Never had any trouble ...
Unfortunately, there is no workaround for holding down a key and making an imported sample sustain unless you make the sample itself ridiculously long so that playing from start to finish takes time.dnekm wrote:I cannot speak as to the vision of the creators of this instrument, but I can say that - as a sound design tool - it has possibilities.
That being said,I do not think at this point in time for sample import to be so dodgy. But I made the investment willingly and if I find workarounds I will let people know. I am good at finding out different ways of doing things...![]()
One other thought - give them a little time (the Hexeract devs) to address these issues.
I consider my purchase of the instrument an investment. What it turns into? Anyone's guess.
Can I make it work for me? Most likely...
Well, if you do find a suitable workaround, please do share.dnekm wrote:What you say might be true if I were working with small samples.....
I already have an idea...
Hexeract seems to identify upwards. So I will take a random sample tomorrow and set the root note 1 and 2 and 3 octaves higher and see what happens.
Will report back after...
At this point - it is not about the instrument but how I can use it.
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