great idea, going to try it, thanks!!!!
On Mon, Apr 6, 2020, 08:55 Chris Taylor <christaylor415@gmail.com> wrote:
quoted 37 lines That's sort of what I'm talking about.
> 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:
>
>> 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
>>>
>>>