Mac and Music News
Jun 15 - 12:42 PM | Music Software > Five12 |
Other new features in Numerology 2.1 include:
- A Transport Loop
- A Keyboard module which emulates a MIDI keyboard. It can be use for triggering sounds, and for monitoring MIDI note streams.
- A new set of I/O modules for additional flexibility in routing MIDI, Audio and CV signals.
- A new 'step-trigger' option for all sequencers to make it easier to emulate the behavior of analog step sequencers.
And, of course, many general fixes and updates. The complete list of changes can be found in the readme file included with all Numerology installations.
Numerology 2.1 is currently available for $119.
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Jun 15 - 11:44 AM | Music Software > Pierre Couprie |
The LE version is free and offers the basis for the annotation scores. The Pro version, at 15€, contains many tools useful for musical analysis.
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Jun 15 - 10:47 AM | Computer Hardware > M-Audio |
Introduced at the latest Winter NAMM Show, the Axiom Pro 49 is an hardware MIDI controller for Mac and PC with the benefit of automatically mapping DAW and virtual instrument controls. It is currently compatible with Pro Tools, Reason, Cubase, Live and Logic.
Want to learn more ?
Then...
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Jun 13 - 03:17 PM | Virtual Instrument > Akki Plugs |
Features :
• 2.2 GB 24-bit samples.
• Advanced script programming.
• Choose between Natural or Tuned tuning.
• 12 keyswitches.
• 5 velocity layers of plectrum playing downwards and 5 velocity layers of plectrum playing upwards.
• All four strings sampled and each string got recorded notes throughout the full length of the string.
• Release samples.
• Control the hand position on the fret with the modulation wheel. The position is presented on the layout.
• Polyphonic playing allows you t ...
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Jun 13 - 02:29 PM | Plug-ins > Intelligent Devices |
Before there was much "digital" anything, and before records were considered something anachronistic and nostalgia evoking, back when "Dark Side of the Moon" was new and Hip-Hop kind of a distant dream, Stephen St. Croix had an idea: What would happen if you took the the longest analog delay line possible, gave it the greatest signal to noise ratio in a piece of outboard gear, and then made the modulation of it possible over such a wide range that it could effect sound in ways sublime AND outrageous. Something so utilitarian and necessary that it could fit in equally well on Stevie Wonder's "Songs in the Key of Life," or as the means of giving extra gravitas to the sound of a bad acid trip. Stephen called it: The Marshall Time Modulator.
Features :
• Two separate delay lines, in a ratio of 1:2 or 1:4., each with their own volume, phase and pan controls and a joint feedback control.
• Once modulation is added, the ratios between the delay lines don't change, but together the delay lines can be continuously swept over the range from minimum to maximum time over the LFO (Low frequency Oscillator) rate. This is a function of the interaction between the Time Delay, Preset, Time Modulation, LFO Shape and LFO Speed parameters working together.
• From subtle thickening, to reverb loving "spin", to the sound of vinyl left out on the hood of an '84 Camaro in the Black Rock Desert in the last week of August, The Marshall Time Modulator has all the bases covered - and then some.
The Marshall Time Modulator is available now for both Mac OS X and Windows in VST format at a price of $149.
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