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Viewing 15 replies - 2,611 through 2,625 (of 2,942 total)
  • Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    You can already see what my CPU usage is showing. I have posted it twice. And considering that right now, I am running a minimal system as I have been troubleshooting other issues (because that is part of what I do in daily life), SD3 is not one of them.

    My system is slower than yours, despite it being a trash can with a Xeon processor. I’m also using mechanical hard drives which are slower. However, I have more than enough to spread out disk traffic in thunderbolt enclosures, which is important when working with audio.

    So you are in no position to tell me that it is the software when all of the software that you are running is in my current project in Logic. Attempting  the “strength in numbers” approach is futile. That just tells me that there are others running beer budget systems with champagne expectations. Perhaps start by getting two more thunderbolt drives and spread out your audio and sample libraries. Also see what else is running behind the scenes on your Macs as they may be stealing unnecessary resources.

    Telling me it’s the software falls on deaf ears.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    As John put it, Edit Play Style doesn’t affect MIDI in your DAW. Removing/substituting parts in your DAW would be a function of the DAW itself. If you are using Logic, there are at least four ways to do this (one can get really creative from there).

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    1

    Thanked by: pacificm
    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Then tell me why I, as well as many people I know, don’t have any issues with it. I am running it right now without any issues.

    Usually people like you have  the crappiest of all computer set ups for audio production. You seem to think that a fast CPU and one drive is going to do the trick. SSD’s only take you so far, but what most people forget is that the weakest link is the controller. You forget about one thing: bandwidth

    Perhaps, if you actually geared your computer for audio production, you wouldn’t be blaming software.

    So tell me all you want how wrong you think I am. That doesn’t erase the fact that it is working on my computers.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Sorry but you are wrong. Considering that you were running SD3 with in Logic, the reason for your slow down is because logic doesn’t have enough resources to let SD3 run at full speed. I am also running a 16GB system at the moment with zero issues and lots of tracks with plug-ins. If you are running everything all off of one drive, that is a huge clue to your problems. Logic needs plenty of disk traffic to operate

    and before you decide to question this, know that I have been running Logic for over 30 years on far slower systems than yours without issue to it or the plug-Ins it hosts

    jord

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    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    The nano control is sending out the same CC code as your hi-hat. You need to change the CC code on the nano control, which is probably done with an editor. Then apply that modified control to the affected mixer channel by re-learning it.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Put your ZIP file of your audio tracks on Google drive and post the link

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    I’m not implying whether or not the script is useful. To me, the only useless script is a nonworking one.

    However, from my years of experience of not only working with Logic’s drummer mapping, but also creating maps for other drum software to utilize Drummer, that there aren’t any perceivable issues with the drum map within SD3, other than missing future hit instruments such as tambourine, which are easy to add. SD3 maps very nicely to logic‘s drummer articulations and nuances. Dare I say better than the competition.  The only time you’ll ever really encounter a problem is when you go inside the nitty-gritty of drummer and really start messing with things.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    You can cur, copy and delete MIDI within Edit Play Styles. Right-click on your kit piece for its context menu.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Why are you doing this the hard way? The Logic Drun Designer map in SD3 is all you need to work with Drummer. the only extras that you ever may need to add are the percussion MIDI notes, whic you can then save as a user map.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    This often has more to do with the drummer and where he chooses to do his flams. I have never liked to use the foam articulation because they rarely fit and are rather limiting, in my experiences. I would rather program them in the grid editor, which allows me to customize it to fit the song.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    1

    Thanked by: judahkim
    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    The process is a bit quirky, but once you have a MIDI region in the song creator, you can then open  its hamburger menu and save the track as a song structure (I believe the menu item is something to that effect… not at my computer at the moment)

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Yes…


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Count to 8 and draw the hits on the grid. Alternatively, it can also be played with two fingers on a keyboard or MIDI pad controller

    It doesn’t get any simpler.

    We are not talking about the Purdie shuffle here.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    There’s nothing rare about that beat. It’s one of the more common 8th note beats used in many songs. And certainly not difficult to pencil in on the grid. SD3 is more than capable of handling a simple beat like that.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

    Bear-Faced Cow
    Participant

    Clean kits are unprocessed and have all of their dynamics. You were probably comparing them to one that is processed in some way.

    jord


    Jordan L. Chilcott

    Web Site: https://jordanchilcottmusic.com/

Viewing 15 replies - 2,611 through 2,625 (of 2,942 total)

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