I am just starting out with VSL and I also use DP. In the real world I play all sorts of drums/percussion and also guitar but I am definately not a natural keyboard player!
But I find I can still play reasonably fast parts in with a keyboard so I can get the timing, tempo feel, and note velocities right - even if I get every other note wrong or hit two keys by mistake etc! .... I play just to get the performance -allowing any other mistakes to happen (it feels wierd to start with! a bit like Les Dawson!!!!) ...then I just go back and correct the mistakes and just tidy things up in the sequencer - but the *performance* is pretty much there.
Other routes I have found to achieve human/musical performances is to use DP's 'record beats' feature - it basically allows you to (re)record the tempo via a midi source (keyboard or midi drum pad). You just tap on every beat thereby setting the exact tempo between each beat. You can do this before, during or after you start entering midi data.
So you could enter everything by mouse, all notes aligned boringly to the beats of a fixed tempo, then record a new tempo map for it - an actual 'conductor's performance' if you like (well, tempo-wise at least). You could record and save as many as you like and choose the best one later on.
And, similarly, if you record a version of your piece on your preferred real-world instrument of your choice with any old microphone - you can then use it as a guide while you use 'record beats'. Now you have a midi tempo map which mirrors the *performance* you made with your real instrument (watch the BPM display - you'll be amazed at just how much it varies- even for a piece which is basically the same tempo throughout!) So now even if you mouse in all your notes so they are exactly on the beats (ie quantized) or copy and paste the same data 100x in a row at least it will follow the 'conductor track' and already be starting to sound musical. Or if you play in notes on the keyboard you will have a click track to play along with which already has all the 'pushing' and 'pulling' of tempo naturally in place.
Also I have a mic set up next to me so if i have a melody in my head I can record straight away by singing it (badly) .... I'll do a few overdubs/ drop ins until it works and then it's there ...ready to move a midi track underneath it and mouse in the notes copying the performance as it goes....
....Or even - in DP4.6 you can use the new 'pitch' feature in audiotracks where DP will analyse any (monophonic) audio and give you the pitch data (just as in midi) which you can copy and paste into a midi track- voila!
..... OK it's a bit 'off' sometimes but it's quite a nifty feature. And really useful for me as a guitar player because I can record a whole set of really... um....'exotic' chords on my guitar in odd tunings (sequentally one note at a time) and they're instantly midi-fied ready to align, then copy and paste wherever I want in my composition for strings or piano etc ..... whenever I try and play unusual guitar chords from memory via the keyboard I *always* make mistakes and only realise later on when it sounds all wrong. [[:|]]
So there's a few things I do, anyway! Hope it makes sense. Of course we are all making different kinds of music and need to do it different ways! .... but I think the key (and the joy!) to working with VSL (and samplers + sequencers) is to be imaginative and fluid in the way you work and to not tie yourself to any single set of proceedures.
[:)]
Edit: Yes you were really asking about templates!! sorry I was just reading another thread asking about about 'playing or clicking in midi notes' (anyway, hope the above is useful to you as another DP user!).....Um... yes I am already making templates -with Kontact2 I can save the sampler states (programs loaded) with the templates which helps a lot. Lots of templates I think is the way to go!!!!.... quick scratch pads, strings, horns, mini orchestra, favourite ensembles etc
Also, remember in DP the 'Clippings window' which you can use to hold midi data, settings note, composition notes, soundbites, anything useful really and have it 'to hand' in a project or transfer easily between projects (you can make a clip
But I find I can still play reasonably fast parts in with a keyboard so I can get the timing, tempo feel, and note velocities right - even if I get every other note wrong or hit two keys by mistake etc! .... I play just to get the performance -allowing any other mistakes to happen (it feels wierd to start with! a bit like Les Dawson!!!!) ...then I just go back and correct the mistakes and just tidy things up in the sequencer - but the *performance* is pretty much there.
Other routes I have found to achieve human/musical performances is to use DP's 'record beats' feature - it basically allows you to (re)record the tempo via a midi source (keyboard or midi drum pad). You just tap on every beat thereby setting the exact tempo between each beat. You can do this before, during or after you start entering midi data.
So you could enter everything by mouse, all notes aligned boringly to the beats of a fixed tempo, then record a new tempo map for it - an actual 'conductor's performance' if you like (well, tempo-wise at least). You could record and save as many as you like and choose the best one later on.
And, similarly, if you record a version of your piece on your preferred real-world instrument of your choice with any old microphone - you can then use it as a guide while you use 'record beats'. Now you have a midi tempo map which mirrors the *performance* you made with your real instrument (watch the BPM display - you'll be amazed at just how much it varies- even for a piece which is basically the same tempo throughout!) So now even if you mouse in all your notes so they are exactly on the beats (ie quantized) or copy and paste the same data 100x in a row at least it will follow the 'conductor track' and already be starting to sound musical. Or if you play in notes on the keyboard you will have a click track to play along with which already has all the 'pushing' and 'pulling' of tempo naturally in place.
Also I have a mic set up next to me so if i have a melody in my head I can record straight away by singing it (badly) .... I'll do a few overdubs/ drop ins until it works and then it's there ...ready to move a midi track underneath it and mouse in the notes copying the performance as it goes....
....Or even - in DP4.6 you can use the new 'pitch' feature in audiotracks where DP will analyse any (monophonic) audio and give you the pitch data (just as in midi) which you can copy and paste into a midi track- voila!
..... OK it's a bit 'off' sometimes but it's quite a nifty feature. And really useful for me as a guitar player because I can record a whole set of really... um....'exotic' chords on my guitar in odd tunings (sequentally one note at a time) and they're instantly midi-fied ready to align, then copy and paste wherever I want in my composition for strings or piano etc ..... whenever I try and play unusual guitar chords from memory via the keyboard I *always* make mistakes and only realise later on when it sounds all wrong. [[:|]]
So there's a few things I do, anyway! Hope it makes sense. Of course we are all making different kinds of music and need to do it different ways! .... but I think the key (and the joy!) to working with VSL (and samplers + sequencers) is to be imaginative and fluid in the way you work and to not tie yourself to any single set of proceedures.
[:)]
Edit: Yes you were really asking about templates!! sorry I was just reading another thread asking about about 'playing or clicking in midi notes' (anyway, hope the above is useful to you as another DP user!).....Um... yes I am already making templates -with Kontact2 I can save the sampler states (programs loaded) with the templates which helps a lot. Lots of templates I think is the way to go!!!!.... quick scratch pads, strings, horns, mini orchestra, favourite ensembles etc
Also, remember in DP the 'Clippings window' which you can use to hold midi data, settings note, composition notes, soundbites, anything useful really and have it 'to hand' in a project or transfer easily between projects (you can make a clip