Melodyne DNA
- Jay Reynolds
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Melodyne DNA
O M F G:
http://www.celemony.com/cms/index.php?id=dna
I'm intrigued by all the possibilities NOT show in the video. What'll it do to feedback? Or a crash cymbal?
http://www.celemony.com/cms/index.php?id=dna
I'm intrigued by all the possibilities NOT show in the video. What'll it do to feedback? Or a crash cymbal?
Prog out with your cog out.
wow...
"There's nothing noble in being better than your fellow man. True nobility comes from being better than your former self." Or something like that.
www.dreamachinemusic.com
www.dreamachinemusic.com
- RedCrownStudios
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freaking sweet
That could really come in handy for collaboration projects. Someone gives you basic tracks/ideas recorded, and then you tweak it, send it back, and then back and forth and so on.
- Jeff White
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Exactly. I've been eyeing Melodyne for a while but this puts it into 'must-have' territory for me.kronosonic wrote:in a technical sense, that is pretty incredible.
I'd like to use it not to 'correct' stuff but for creative manipulation and warping hell out of audio
"There's nothing noble in being better than your fellow man. True nobility comes from being better than your former self." Or something like that.
www.dreamachinemusic.com
www.dreamachinemusic.com
- Jay Reynolds
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Or what will it do to non-pitched material? And they're using poly-phonic material in the demo, but what happens when you run it on a full mix with drum'n'everything?daede wrote:Exactly. I've been eyeing Melodyne for a while but this puts it into 'must-have' territory for me.kronosonic wrote:in a technical sense, that is pretty incredible.
I'd like to use it not to 'correct' stuff but for creative manipulation and warping hell out of audio
Prog out with your cog out.
It probably won't like it, but sometimes the most interesting sounds come from doing things that the product wasn't intended to do.superaction80 wrote: Or what will it do to non-pitched material? And they're using poly-phonic material in the demo, but what happens when you run it on a full mix with drum'n'everything?
"There's nothing noble in being better than your fellow man. True nobility comes from being better than your former self." Or something like that.
www.dreamachinemusic.com
www.dreamachinemusic.com
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I am extremely skeptical of this. I just can't see how it can be possible to extract individual notes from a chord in a single audio file. Does anybody know if there's a technical explanation available of how they do it? Has anybody seen the actual thing in action?
If it really is true, then fantastic. It could be a great tool, when used judiciously. I know a lot of people are concerned that this will cheapen music, making it so that anybody with some money and a computer can just mash his or her fist on a piano and then sort it out later using this technology. Yes, this is true, in part, but good music is about a lot more than just notes. Expression, articulation, and composition are three aspects that, synthesized, will never achieve the qualities of a true human performance.
A friend of mine pointed to the current trend in pop and hip-hop music of abusing auto-tuners (T-Pain, anyone?) and argued that this new DNA technology could be abused just as rampantly. I replied that, sure, the auto-tuner (and vocoder) thing is ridiculously out of hand in pop. I don't deny it, but look at what a small percentage of actual music this is. I personally own thousands of songs, many of them contemporary, and not a single one of them does this. It's a passing fad; it will stop being popular within a year, two at the most, I guarantee it. The same would be true if people started abusing the DNA software. I have enough faith in musicians and in music fans to believe this very strongly.
There will always be those artists and producers out there who go overboard with the next new technology, but if they don't put in the essential human elements of music, they will always be doomed to being a footnote or, if they're lucky, a tabloid headline in musical history.
If it's real, this Melodyne DNA could be a great tool for those who know how to use it wisely (read=EXTREMELY SPARINGLY), and it may even help weed out the hacks.
Thank you for reading my novel, sorry I got a little carried away.
If it really is true, then fantastic. It could be a great tool, when used judiciously. I know a lot of people are concerned that this will cheapen music, making it so that anybody with some money and a computer can just mash his or her fist on a piano and then sort it out later using this technology. Yes, this is true, in part, but good music is about a lot more than just notes. Expression, articulation, and composition are three aspects that, synthesized, will never achieve the qualities of a true human performance.
A friend of mine pointed to the current trend in pop and hip-hop music of abusing auto-tuners (T-Pain, anyone?) and argued that this new DNA technology could be abused just as rampantly. I replied that, sure, the auto-tuner (and vocoder) thing is ridiculously out of hand in pop. I don't deny it, but look at what a small percentage of actual music this is. I personally own thousands of songs, many of them contemporary, and not a single one of them does this. It's a passing fad; it will stop being popular within a year, two at the most, I guarantee it. The same would be true if people started abusing the DNA software. I have enough faith in musicians and in music fans to believe this very strongly.
There will always be those artists and producers out there who go overboard with the next new technology, but if they don't put in the essential human elements of music, they will always be doomed to being a footnote or, if they're lucky, a tabloid headline in musical history.
If it's real, this Melodyne DNA could be a great tool for those who know how to use it wisely (read=EXTREMELY SPARINGLY), and it may even help weed out the hacks.
Thank you for reading my novel, sorry I got a little carried away.
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