Neat idea. Next step would be to adjust the velocities in the recorded midi either in Digistix, or another piano roll. I might have recorded from Helium into another instance of helium and used the velocity edits there and moved the notes to match the bass drum or bongos/toms I wanted to trigger (in the app I was targeting). Great use of the new KQ app!
I like that you can do this but it seems to loose the feel of the original. I wish digital stick had more steps or divisions of time to accommodate the anticipated beats etc…
Interessante, estou assistindo Gilberto Gil no Lollapalooza Brasil, mas depois vou assistir. Eu sempre busco apps que convertam áudio em MIDI editável. Esses dias vi um plugin para reaper que faz isso muito bem, mas eu não uso essa daw, uso somente meu velho iPad Air 2. Desculpe pelas elucubrações, muito obrigado, amigo
wouldn’t it be much easier to play manually, its like doing one thing over again, might’ve finished the whole track during the conversion. just my 2 cents. peace. ❤
@@Punk_Mayhem Fair question! Yes, in this case, and depending on your skill level, many others. It's a bit of a proof of concept of what you can do with Drambo and also a experiment. I'll use it for some more complicated rhythms like Tabla or things in 7/8 or weird times. I'm also working on an improved version that captures velocity.
@@edzielinskiohhhhhhh! now i do understand! silly me, i was thinking from such a narrow perspective, yes yes eastern instruments can be manipulated to the core. btw , huge fan of yours, youre not aware of that. Love and hugs! ❤
My head hurts trying to understand why anybody would do this. Now if NEON was able to chop the midi into actual kick and snare midi notes instead of exporting the timing that would be different. Also if you could quantize something to the groove of the original audio that would be different too. But for all this you could easily play the drum beat back by hand or program it in by ear. That would absolutely be quicker.