Yes, I have no idea what you mean, can you explain?roberth909 wrote:All I want is for the crowded sound of the digital mix bus to be addressed, all the rest is a bonus.
Cheers
Stephen
Moderator: James Steele
Yes, I have no idea what you mean, can you explain?roberth909 wrote:All I want is for the crowded sound of the digital mix bus to be addressed, all the rest is a bonus.
And this is precisely where the craft of composing and arranging comes in. I always come back to Brahms when he was asked how he decides which notes to use in his works.bayswater wrote:It happens to me when a composer records his rhythm guitar part four times and insists they all appear in the mix along with the doubled bass, piano, organ and string section. (I forgot the horns)
This is a rhetorical comment.roberth909 wrote:All I want is for the crowded sound of the digital mix bus to be addressed, all the rest is a bonus.
The other lesson is the benefits of different people doing different parts of the overall process. It can be very difficult to leave out notes you spent months on, but pretty simple for someone who's hearing them for the first time.MIDI Life Crisis wrote:And this is precisely where the craft of composing and arranging comes in. I always come back to Brahms when he was asked how he decides which notes to use in his works.bayswater wrote:It happens to me when a composer records his rhythm guitar part four times and insists they all appear in the mix along with the doubled bass, piano, organ and string section. (I forgot the horns)
His answer (to paraphrase): What's important is the notes I leave out.
David Polich wrote:This is a rhetorical comment.roberth909 wrote:All I want is for the crowded sound of the digital mix bus to be addressed, all the rest is a bonus.
If your sound is "crowded" then there is something wrong with your mix, not
the digital mix bus.
Men at some time are masters of their fates:
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves, that we are underlings.
~ Shakespeare
Quotation from Julius Caesar (1.2.135)
Jeez, this is getting heavy for a Saturday night.MIDI Life Crisis wrote:Men at some time are masters of their fates:
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves, that we are underlings
Not for me it ain't. I'm not tied to any note that doesn't work. Only the ones that do.bayswater wrote:It can be very difficult to leave out notes you spent months on, but pretty simple for someone who's hearing them for the first time.
Depends on your perspective. I love me some Shakespeare - anytime!bayswater wrote:Jeez, this is getting heavy for a Saturday night.MIDI Life Crisis wrote:Men at some time are masters of their fates:
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,
But in ourselves, that we are underlings
I think someone mentioned that the Mac version doesn't support VST, but then I heard Magic Dave reporting in his presentation that the versions of DP are identical. Maybe that is identical feature for feature and not byte for byte. If Plogue Bidule can run VSTs on a Mac, I'm not sure why DP shouldn't be able to.spitfire31 wrote:Was there any mention at all whether that ability has also been carried over to the Mac version?
Well, they can't be identical to that degree. The PC version won't work with Audio Units. VST in Mac would be nice, but I can't see why it would be a priority.zed wrote:I think someone mentioned that the Mac version doesn't support VST, but then I heard Magic Dave reporting in his presentation that the versions of DP are identical. Maybe that is identical feature for feature and not byte for byte. If Plogue Bidule can run VSTs on a Mac, I'm not sure why DP shouldn't be able to.spitfire31 wrote:Was there any mention at all whether that ability has also been carried over to the Mac version?