Le Mardi, 11 Décembre 2007 09:58:50 -0500,
Dave Phillips <dlphillips(a)woh.rr.com> a écrit :
Found on a Cakewalk docs site :
*Groove Quantize*
Groove Quantize allows you to change the "feel" of an existing
performance. This is especially handy for spicing up step-entered
MIDI data or performances that need tight, groovin' timing.
The best way to learn how to use Groove Quantize is by
experimentation. Other than the Groove Source itself, the settings
that will effect Groove Quantize the most are the Resolution,
Strength Duration, Strength Time, and Strength Velocity.
So now we all know.
I though it had more to do with fitting notes to a tempo. Like when
something is recorded but could use a bit of help to be tight to the
tempo. Anyways, I'm pretty sure Seq24 does that (not used it
personally).
On the other hand, I once had a Roland drum machine that 'spiced up' a
pattern by introducing variations in tone, tempo and attack. Hydrogen
does that.
BTW, I read your article in Linux Magazine (yes, that magazine with the
full-page mostly Windows 'shareware' advertisement ;-) and perhaps an
interesting way to try 64Studio on a Windows machine is by means of the
VmPlayer 64Studio virtual machine appliance. Some downloading to do,
though. I'd try it, but I don't have enough Windows interest, and the
'Windows people' I know are not into playing/making music.
Cheers,
Al