I guess if there is already a random timing function built in there will be no reason not to play the notes at the same time.
DG
DG
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@DG said:
I guess if there is already a random timing function built in there will be no reason not to play the notes at the same time.
DG
Maybe it would be more proper to limit our conversations with respect to other manufacturers to intergration - hardware & workflow.
I wonder how they will handle the divisi playing. The notes in a chord never arrive exactly at the same time and since the a program cannot look into the future (at least not until virtual instrument-sequencer integration improves) to see what notes are to come it has to wait a certain time. This usually implies a latency, I'd guess somewhere between 10 and 20 ms, to allow for sloppy playing. That's a possible downside to automatic divisi handling.
@William said:
I haven't heard any demos other than an inconsequential little blurb for tenor sax which sounded o.k.
However there is one complete fallacy in the DVZ (DIVISI) hype. That bad sample performances sound "like a pipe organ" because of too much doubling. That is NOT the reason, and is in fact a relatively minor factor, especially considering you can already do divisi with solo and ensembles of varying size as in VI.
The real reason for the "pipe organ" sound is lack of expression. So a "note-on, note-off, note-on" effect occurs. You can have all the divisi in the world, and that won't change a damned thing. It will always be a challenge to create real expression in a musical performance.
...
Even if AI is better (by whatever measure), and nobody has even heard a demo yet .... then I am not going to spend another 5 years drooling over a new toolset. Life's too short, and I've all the tools I ever dreamed of to make great music.
I guess very, very, very few people will have the money, determination, need, and obsessiveness to start out all-over again on a new architectuve, new set of tools, new headaches ....
.... and anyway, all this specualtion before anyone has heard anything?
@Plowman said:
And one final irony: Ai claims to be a high-end sports car, but that demographic is probably the least likely to futz with the coordination of seven computers, networking, etc. The mid-rangers tolerate the tangle of farms and compatibility, like the gurus here. They do it because their resources are limited. But the Porsche crowd has a low tolerance for it.
I think strings will make or break the deal for me.