@Roman Beilharz said:
How could I know that Peter wrote the manual?
Actually, my wife Caroline wrote that section of it with excellent support from David Govett, Tom Hopkins and Ashley Witt, and of course, Herb's demo at NAMM.
"My highest goal in this game is to be able to increase real-time-music-access and decrease technical setup."
AMEN! We attempt the same thing in the books we put out, especially the new ones on Cubase SX and Sonar 2.2 coming out this summer. I believe that your concept is very much a quality control (QC) issue that most in MIDILand don't pay enough attention to. We call this, "the user experience." Our approach is rooted in what's called Six Sigma quality planning and training which starts with defining the customer's expectation.
We define a good user experience as productively implementing the software/library within a few hours, then going on to more advanced training. For our software training, we screen shoot every move. So, we get people operational pretty quickly, often within 6 hours, even on a difficult program like Logic.
For the Performance tool, Legato mode was the easiest portion. Alternation mode, Caroline struggled with a little more until we figured out that Alternation mode could really have been named Phrase Shaper. Once we were clear that we were alternating between keyswitches (hence, alternation tool), we then saw the musical application was quickly shaping a phrase using alternating up bows and down bows, etc.
The Repetition tool was the most difficult for Caroline, because we were operating on a false concept. In the VSL literature, it talks about groove patterns. Over here, we thought this was a form of Groove Control similar to what Ilio uses. But it wasn't! Once we saw that you had to play in the repetitions, that's when we understood what was going on. Up to then, Tom, Dave and Ashley were trying all kinds of things to help us get the instruction going. So no, it was not obviously clear, and I hope for the future that the GUI (graphic user interface) will be improved to more "telegraph" to the eye what's going on.
When you consider the "hidden" trumpet repeat fanfares that John Williams often sticks in, you now have with the Repetition tool, a way of replicating that. So I feel it's definitely worth learning, but you do have to set aside the time to do so.
BTW, I hear you're a drummer! I was a percussion major at Berklee ('75) where I lead my own big band playing Kenton, Rich and Don Ellis charts.
Look forward to hearing from you.
Peter Alexander
lacomposers@msn.com310-559-3779