Mac and Music News
Through Thursday January 1, 2015
Jan 11 - 05:17 PM | Computer Hardware > Mark Of The Unicorn |
The HDX-SDI is housed in a rugged, one rack-space cast metal enclosure with removable brackets for convenient desktop operation.
The HDX-SDI with Thunderbolt technology will ship Spring, 2012.
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Jan 11 - 02:08 PM | Music Software > Serato |
and increased performance.
Key Features of ITCH 2.1
- Simple Sync mode added for two deck controllers. For quick and easy matching of the tempo and beats of two tracks playing simultaneously.
- SP-6 Hardware control. Increased SP-6 Sample Player power, with the addition of hardware controls for each ITCH controller to trigger samples with controller cue point buttons.
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Jan 11 - 01:32 PM | Music Hardware > Eowave |
The synthesis section offers the possibility to mix 4 different waveforms (saw, square, sub, noise) for infinite modulations. The SUB DESYNC mode enables to desynchronize and to detune the SUB and the main oscillator for complex sounds. The filter is a 24 dB resonant low-pass filter. The LFO has 8 waveforms (triangle, ramp up, ramp down, square, random, digital noise, staircase up, staircase down) and can modulate the VCO, VCF or PWM.
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Jan 11 - 10:52 AM | Plug-ins > XILS-lab |
Some features:
- True stereo signal path (with independent right and left delay).
- MIDI Sync and Stereo Link (delay modes).
- Sync grid zone (with up to eight custom masks, each with independent length and level).
- One multimode filter (zero-delay, self-oscillating, feedback design with drive).
- Two independent envelopes (loop-able ADSR and AR with three trigger modes).
- One synchronisable multi-waveform LFO (with three reset options).
- Snap-to-grid function (to quantise mask locators on musical values).
- Swap masked/unmasked function (in realtime).
- Four clock modes (DAW, FIX,TAP temp, IN).
- Realtime temp analysis function (for live performance).
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Jan 10 - 07:24 PM | Misc > Backbeat Books |
Gone are the days when home recording was limited to four tracks of tape hiss on a cassette porta-studio. Now, limitless digital multitrack recording and a vast array of outboard effects and processors are available to anyone with a computer. Add a few other essentials such as a microphone, some headphones and monitors, and anyone can have a home studio capable of making professional recordings worthy of airplay and release. What one might not have is the know-how to harness all that vast potential, which is where The Home Recording Handbook comes in.
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