Hello John-Paul,
@jpgandy said:
No, there isn't an audible change in sound that I can hear if I've hit a key without pedal and then depress/raise the pedal after. John-Paul
good news for the workaround.
I spent some weeks on the countryside, just walking, breathing and playing the piano (a somewhat detuned, but real piano).
I now know that I'd like to return to real instruments and real people, finding that, the closer I come to imitate instruments and musicians by computers the more I realize, I'll never reach them - at least not with having the same sweet flow I get in the real world - and for that flow I am willing to accept flaws.
So, the question is how to draw back. And within what time. What to leave, what to take with me.
I'll leave some final thoughts, comments and some sort of present regarding a workaround:
1) You could check whether ProTools offers real-time midi-controllers/converters.
If yes, what you do manually after a recording you could instruct ProTools to do in real time with those midi-controllers/converters.
That's the basic concept of Logic's environment: To set up controllers/transformers which manipulate the incoming and outgoing midi-stream.
2) You could give the last Windows version of Logic (5.5.1) a try.
I composed a workaround for Logic which works in real time and requires no editing of the recorded track.
I created and tested this workaround on Logic Windows 5.5.1.
See http://community.vsl.co.at/forums/p/31305/199407.aspx#199407 for details.
Sebastian
P.S.:
Some notes on the Windows-version of Logic:
In most PC configurations one would use Logic only as a midi-sequencer; that means you'd need another program (in your case e.g. ProTools) to record audio data and to host Software-Instruments which would be played by Logic.
A connection between Logic and ProTools would be established by virtual Midi cables like "Maple Midi Tools".