Midi on steel - an example
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- Larry Beck
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Midi on steel - an example
I had a midi pickup to spare and a slow evening so I took it apart, hacked it a bit and mounted it on my steel.
I documented what I did to serve as a warning for anyone else who might be tempted....
http://pie.midco.net/lbeck27/midi/midi-steel.html
I documented what I did to serve as a warning for anyone else who might be tempted....
http://pie.midco.net/lbeck27/midi/midi-steel.html
- Jody Carver
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- Larry Beck
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- chas smith
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I've posted these pics before, so I hope you don't mind seeing them again. The pickup on the E9 neck was made from 2 Rolands that I spent enough time on, that I never want to do that again. This was the 3rd Super Pro off the assembly line (unknown to myself at the time). It appears that I've compromised the collector value.
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by chas smith on 17 August 2005 at 11:37 AM.]</p></FONT>
<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by chas smith on 17 August 2005 at 11:37 AM.]</p></FONT>
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Larry; regarding oscillating frequency you stated:
Pardon my ignorance, I'm not familiar with MIDI pickups as such and I'm wondering,
does the MIDI pickup give you the ability to turn the steel into another flavor of MIDI synth ?
Does the pickup and system track a slide or a "stringbender" change in real time or does it incurr a delay due to processing time?<SMALL>The midi pickup takes it a little bit of time to find that out. How fast it does it is a function of the pickup and the preamps and the software</SMALL>
Pardon my ignorance, I'm not familiar with MIDI pickups as such and I'm wondering,
does the MIDI pickup give you the ability to turn the steel into another flavor of MIDI synth ?
- Larry Beck
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Ray,
Here's the signal chain as I understand it. If I'm wrong, people will jump in no doubt.
The midi pickup (one per string) senses the vibration and the signal goes to the combination switch/preamp. From there it goes down a 13 pin cable to a unit (Roland/Axon/Yamaha) that changes the analog frequency information to midi data.
for a single note, a midi data stream would have a patch number, note on, and note off code. There are a lot of other data items that can be sent like modulation, velocity, etc.a small computer program does this.
To your question, some patches are like a slide guitar, violin, fretless bass, etc. They work like you would expect the real instrument to. Other patches don't make continuously variable pitch changes. (Imagine slide piano)
This is a function of the synth patch or sound. As such it could be changed, but it might sound weird.
The latency (time lag) doesn't seem to effect slides. I only really notice it on bass strings where the string vibrates slower and it takes a few more micro-seconds to interpret this.
Here's the signal chain as I understand it. If I'm wrong, people will jump in no doubt.
The midi pickup (one per string) senses the vibration and the signal goes to the combination switch/preamp. From there it goes down a 13 pin cable to a unit (Roland/Axon/Yamaha) that changes the analog frequency information to midi data.
for a single note, a midi data stream would have a patch number, note on, and note off code. There are a lot of other data items that can be sent like modulation, velocity, etc.a small computer program does this.
To your question, some patches are like a slide guitar, violin, fretless bass, etc. They work like you would expect the real instrument to. Other patches don't make continuously variable pitch changes. (Imagine slide piano)
This is a function of the synth patch or sound. As such it could be changed, but it might sound weird.
The latency (time lag) doesn't seem to effect slides. I only really notice it on bass strings where the string vibrates slower and it takes a few more micro-seconds to interpret this.
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- Earnest Bovine
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Actually patch number (MIDI Program Change command) would not be sent with each note. That would be something you choose before you play a song or a part of a song.<SMALL>for a single note, a midi data stream would have a patch number, note on, and note off code. There are a lot of other data items that can be sent like modulation, velocity, etc.a small computer program does this</SMALL>
Velocity is part of every note-on command.<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by b0b on 18 August 2005 at 12:59 PM.]</p></FONT>
- Larry Beck
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- chas smith
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Doug, yes, 2 Axons and a blender. When I was having a lot of difficulty tracking the bar, (and it really doesn't like the pedals) I called Axon. They told me that the Axon expected a typical guitar tuning and that it shouldn't work at all with what I'm tuned to and especially moving the bar around. (Gee, that demonstration at the NAMM show where the player played more notes, in one set, than I play in a year, certainly was impressive)
Not what I wanted to hear, still, I got it to work well enough for what I wanted it for, that being, single notes, being "chased" by my samples and repsonsive to a little "bar movement".
Not what I wanted to hear, still, I got it to work well enough for what I wanted it for, that being, single notes, being "chased" by my samples and repsonsive to a little "bar movement".
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- chas smith
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