I thought there was a way (in Live, or with an M4L device) to import a pitched sample, and then slice it to a number of midi notes (determined by you) while pitching it and keeping it's speed, automatically.
I must admit that Sampler is still relatively new to me, and I'm by no means a master at it yet. So maybe this is something Sampler can do pretty easily.
Basically I have tonal samples that I want to turn into instruments. I don't like just throwing them into a Sampler unwarped because it causes the sample to speed up or slow down in order to pitch it. I'm trying to pitch while retaining playback tempo. I know it's possible to manually do it with warping, and to just make a new sample for every third or every other key to keep the tempo intact, but I seem to remember watching someone do this automatically without having to spend all of that time on it.
Device to automatically slice and pitch a sample?
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Re: Device to automatically slice and pitch a sample?
Drag the sample onto an audio track then right-click the title bar of the clip and you'll see the following options:
Slice to New MIDI Track
Convert Harmony to New MIDI Track
Convert Melody to New MIDI Track
Convert Drums to New MIDI Track
Is this what you're looking for?
Slice to New MIDI Track
Convert Harmony to New MIDI Track
Convert Melody to New MIDI Track
Convert Drums to New MIDI Track
Is this what you're looking for?
Garry Knight
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Re: Device to automatically slice and pitch a sample?
Just keep in mind there are a number of options available for I believe the Slice to New MIDI Track, so make sure you've selected the correct slicing option.
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Re: Device to automatically slice and pitch a sample?
Rhypht, I think that the terminology is getting things a little confused. "Slice" , in live, refers to process where an audio file is represented by a new midi file. It sounds lioe what you want is for a sampling process where the resulting instrument adjusts the pitch (keytracked) but doesn't change the playback sample speed. Yeh?
I think sampler (with one reference sample) does adjust the playback speed and i think simpler does too. I dont know of a device that performs this automatically so I'd probably warp copies of the original file (with warp mode suited and tweaked for every new note) then written to a new file. Change the clip name to reference the sound and pitch before writing to a new file. Then import to sampler (all at once i think) and make sure the target notes match up the incoming notes by pulling up the 'Zone' layout. Makes sense?
Sound like work? This is why (plus other reasons) I use soft synths instead of samples.
Question? Can wavetable synths be configured to capture long(er) style waveforms? The type that a person might want to copy like in the above example?
What Harmr? Are these synths good for that? Or are there better sampling synths? Probably, right?
I think sampler (with one reference sample) does adjust the playback speed and i think simpler does too. I dont know of a device that performs this automatically so I'd probably warp copies of the original file (with warp mode suited and tweaked for every new note) then written to a new file. Change the clip name to reference the sound and pitch before writing to a new file. Then import to sampler (all at once i think) and make sure the target notes match up the incoming notes by pulling up the 'Zone' layout. Makes sense?
Sound like work? This is why (plus other reasons) I use soft synths instead of samples.
Question? Can wavetable synths be configured to capture long(er) style waveforms? The type that a person might want to copy like in the above example?
What Harmr? Are these synths good for that? Or are there better sampling synths? Probably, right?