Hi Jerry,
thanks for sharing this episode of Gumby. I was born in 1985 and I didn't know this series at all, as far as I remember.
I enjoyed both the episode and your soundtrack, I really enjoyed the composition. I can only imagine how difficult it was to produce orchestral music with the available technology back then. I watched an episode from the previous series also, because I wanted to hear the original orchestral scores. I can understand that the audience preferred the real orchestra, I also prefer real orchestral soundtracks even compared to latest MIDI mock-ups (mine included).
William, you and Jerry are excellent composers, people like you pioneered MIDI orchestration and I sincerely admire that. Today we have really great plug-ins, that's because of decades of research, and composers demanding for better samples all the time played a huge role in such research. I enjoy listening to first MIDI attempts and I wouldn't mind listening to yours......whenever you should wish to share them. 😊
Jerry, would you mind sharing some details about the process, please? For example you said you had to match the guitar playing by sight........how did it work? Nowadays we import videos in our DAWs, did you have the footage playing on a separate screen while you were recording guitars on a tape multitrack? Or was it a digital multitrack recorder?
Francesco
Hi Francesco,
I don't think it was possible to create virtual orchestra music in the late 80s, at least not with the samplers I had access to at the time. I remember the violin patch I used could fit on a 1.44MB floppy, that tells you how few and small the samples were! Out of the 99 Gumby segments I scored, a few, like the one I posted had no dialogue and had to be synced to the Gumby band. I would watch the video and write the music in pencil onto score paper and my assistant would then sequence the music. By carefully watching the hand and arm movements of the characters, I'd eventually get it right. It was tedious, time-consuming and there were no shortcuts. Luckily there were only a few shows like that or I would have gone crazy. My assistant sequenced the cues using a Yamaha QX-3 sequencer. Once the music was recorded onto tape, SMPTE time code was used to sync to video.