I have Sonar X3 which has Melodyne and also a guitar strum simulator (which obviously doesn't work well for Flamenco or I would be using it), but I can hand create chords in MIDI and cut and paste into midi clips ... . I know exactly which notes go where, and have no need for Melodyne. I want to PLAY them with Push pads in note groups within phrases, not in full phrases is the issue. I have a very specific issue - two play chords of choice by using the pads (in a drum rack, if possible, or a chord rack which will have to be created somehow...)
And the Flamenco chord variations is precisely why I want to create my own voicings,... they are very different from keyboard voicings...
(Actually, it is the use of power chords intelligently with string articulation with rasgueo, which is why the keys of (A, E, especially) and B, and F# Phrygian are so important in Flamenco, and other keys are less so....
I cover all this in the theory section on my website.....
(I'm talking Solea, Bulerias, Siguiriyas, Tientos/Tangos, Fandangos Grandes, here - among others)
And let's not kid ourselves - Spanish Gypsies are coming online very fast, and will be asking for the same thing as soon as they get the money for the electronics.....

There is much more to the flamenco sound than chord voicing, but it is an absolute necessity to get started....
Khazul wrote:Have you got melodyne? If so, that can decompose your existing audio recording of you playing directly into midi. (Make sure its the DNA version).
They used to have a downloadable demo if this is of interest.
The other headache you might have with non guitar sounds is they may sound horribly muddy given full guitar voiced chords, so you may have to thin them down a bit, but keep the essentials to keep it lively. IMHO the basic flamenco progression are (Im sorry to say), boring as hell and its the player that gives them life and energy.
There used to be a nice scripted guitar in kontact that could kind of transform key voiced chords into decent guitar voiced chords. I have to admit after having tried it for a bit, I gave up and when back to chopping up loops until they released their funk guitarist (or whatever its called) instrument. I wish they did a spanish (including flamenco) version of that as well.
Buleriachk wrote:(What would you do if a singer were singing por Bulerias in copla in A Phrygian and suddenly switched to cuple in A major, using the relative F#m in that key as well? With the guitar capo on the 4th fret, yet. Or accompany the cambio in Bulerias or the Silencio in Alegrias? Or.....)
At this stage I would probably throw the capo (which you wont be using at this time) at the singer
Buleriachk wrote:
But I can already play Flamenco, thank you. I want to experiment with other instruments remaining reasonably close to the traditional idiom, if that makes sense. I get really bored with picado practice sometimes......
I think you have a calling for spanish house - drop in a four to the floor and some fat dirty bass and see where it goes
