beats me wrote:chrysalis33rpm wrote:beats me wrote:Excuse my ignorance on this one, but if you are using a piece of software that syncs songs together perfectly on it's own why on earth do you need to use encoded vinyl or CDs? Is this a "it looks cool" thing?
-to play songs together you dont have time to or dont want to warp
-to scratch clips or whole arrangements in Live
-to make micro adjustments to the groove between 2 clips via a spinning platter
-the sexy feel of vinyl
oh, and you're right, it does look cool.
I understand about the technical aspects you mentioned but there are other options to make adjustments. I think it's largely a showmanship thing. I'm not completely arguing the point because I want jog wheels on a controller for Traktor but I think this is vinyl DJ's last grasp at holding on.
Man, I couldn't tell you the last time I saw a DJ scratch at a gig for anything longer than a quick zip.
Its far more than a technical aspect to me- its a design aspect, a physical interface, a way of interacting directly with the software and music. Some people want a lemur to touch their music- i want a large spinning platter with a slip mat. The resistance of the record is very important- its not at all a showmanship thing for me. The
feel is essential to me in a controlller, that way it begins to approach something like a saxophone or guitar- the exact pressure and angle of the way you touch it makes a difference.
As far as 'other options' to making these kind of adjustments, well AFAIK there is really one other option at the clip level, and one at the global level, neither of which is fully satisfactory:
The first (clip level) involves mapping an encoder to clip nudge, which then can nudge the playback point of the clip according to global/clip quantize. Drawback N°1: works only on selected clip (forget beat juggling, is also fiddly as you have to navigate around to find the proper clip) N°2: only works for micro adjustments with the quantize set to none, which is not where one typically works, meaning that you must set and then reset the quantize at either global or clip level N°3: is not pressure sensitive.
The second (global level) is much better implemented in Live, and has only one principal drawback- that the global tempo nudge buttons are not pressure sensitive (I'm not sure how jogging the global playback position works in Live as I haven't really needed it yet)
And finally, as you stated, I will never 100% trust a piece of software to do my beatmatching and it's ideal to be able to f*ck the beats up to my satisfaction at any time- not determined by the software or a previous interpretation of correct beat structure (warping).
Anyway, look- you state effectively that it's superficial that we want vinyl control in Live (just for showmanship). I say, i came up in that era, is it not natural that I have a physical/emotional connection to a way of working? Don't all people evolve different preferences for their tools? Live is very exciting because it is an open system- to me this is one more way of extending that potential. Whether it's useful or not to you personally is besides the point.
And because you haven't seen a DJ scratching lately must mean that it's a dead art and there's no reason to support it...sorry, what? Maybe we need to make the tools better so it remains in the loop.
Another way of saying what I'm trying to get at is that right now Live is very good for "working with the head" - and i want it to get better for "working with the hands".