That's sort of what I'm talking about.
Almost every time I've worked with MIDI hardware (this is usually stuff
that's ~20 years old) and ableton, once I hit a certain amount of tracks
and cc automation, the synth starts to choke up and (at least) the tempo
gets thrown off. This is of course annoying, but I've been able to exploit
it in a glitchy Oval-ian sort of way. Some synths do voicestealing,
unpredictable parameter movements and tempo fluctuations - others will
fully freeze and just got stuck on a note. The former can produce a nice
and unpredictable result.
Anyways, I've never encountered anyone talking about doing this and I
dedicated my 20s to recording interviews with electronic musicians. So just
curious if anyone else had encountered what I'm talking about.
Surely the results aren't that different from other methods derived from
VSTs or parameter automation but still - interesting stuff if you're into
that sort of thing.
On Sun, Apr 5, 2020 at 4:36 PM Brian Oblivion <djmanos@gmail.com> wrote:
quoted 15 lines My ableton setup involves a couple knobs on my controller that are mapped
> My ableton setup involves a couple knobs on my controller that are mapped
> to at least 11 functions each, and every time I make an adjustment the CPU
> meter jumps, and the sync hiccups. Does that count? :p
>
> On Sun, Apr 5, 2020 at 10:46 AM Jake Levine <jake@drunkonvinyl.com> wrote:
>
>> I don’t know how this is made, but seems like it’s a possibility -
>> https://daily.bandcamp.com/features/an-introduction-to-extratone-the-worlds-fastest-music-genre
>> On Apr 4, 2020, 4:15 PM -0400, Chris Taylor <christaylor415@gmail.com>,
>> wrote:
>>
>> interested to know if producers have used sending lots of midi/cc data to
>> hardware gear to get unpredictable results
>>
>>