![]() ![]() While it may be ok for him to call this a lost casue thus leaving it unresolved and moving on (and who could blame him), it is not ok with me. That’s fine with me.īo is speaking only for himself here in regard to writing this off. So unless it is important to you to try and "wring this issue with SONAR out, We can call it a lost cause and just move on. I really appreciate you time and efforts on this but at this time feel your time is better spent programming. Perhaps another night’s contemplation will reveal the “Magic Souse” that will open up the door. Since I have Reaper working as you have outlined, I am about to give up on SONAR (not giving up on your product!) and move on to making music. I have tried both implementations and still no joy. The other way is to create two independent tracks, One an Audio Instrument track which holds the Instrument VSTi and the other a simple MIDI tract that defaults to being routed to the VSTi track. Some things are hidden but you should be able to make this work by following your instructions. One is called a “Simple Instrument Track” which combines one Track into both an Audio and MIDI Track. How familiar are you with SonarX3 in my case? There are two ways to create and Instrument track. Hello again Ed1, are you saying that YOU have it working in SONAR or that your directions SHOULD work. Keep up the great work (I have done programming and I know what it takes to get something like this to market!) Scaler is a great program and while as a Jazz guitar player I’m pretty well versed in theory, this is a real time saver and inspiration tool. SONAR has issues (at least with VST3 dll) and I’ll see what I can find out and report back. So to recap: Reaper is working fine and is a simple process. If I do figure it out, I would be happy to pass my findings along to both of you as a “Thank You” for your help. It most likely will take more than two tracks (i.e. I’m not saying it can’t be done - and I will figure it out in time. SONAR’s routing has always had issues and while a fantastic product, this is its weak spot as far as a learning curve. In Reaper it is strait forward and makes perfect sense. However It took me about 90 seconds to get the VST3 dll to work in Reaper (my second DAW). My only issue was getting it to route in SONAR (I was/am using the VST3 dll so I will try the VST2 today. I do understand the “routing paradiam” for Scaler. Let me know if you need further help on this. Midi routing can go from really straightforward to awfully complicated, so I hope I haven’t added more confusion as it also depends on your setup and the configuration of your project.Īlso make sure you use the VST2 version of Scaler as the VST3 still has some issues with routing. In that case it might complicate things a bit if multiple instrument were already configure to listen to this common MIDI track. For example, some DAW allow you to redirect Scaler’s output onto a MIDI track that you use as the source for your routing. I understand how it can be slightly different depending on your DAW and its routing capabilities. If you now add a third instrument, playing on Scaler still doesn’t trigger notes on it, unless you make it listen to one of the tracks Scaler’s output is redirected onto.Scaler can now “control” the new instrument. Now if you tell your second track to listen to Scaler’s MIDI output, the signal is routed to your instrument.If you add another track with an instrument, playing on Scaler doesn’t trigger any note on the new instrument.Add a track into an empty project in your DAW and load Scaler.You routed Scaler’s output in a way that it is redirected to all of your tracks’ MIDI channel 1.All of your instruments are configured to listen to Scaler’s MIDI output.If Scaler outputs to all of your instrument it is because either: ![]() Internally Scaler could output 16 different MIDI signal (1 per channel), when routing the MIDI you have to tell you external instrument to listen to a specific track and channel. Unless you routed the MIDI in a specific fashion, Scaler doesn’t broadcast its MIDI output anywhere. The transformed MIDI signal is output by Scaler on its channel 1 (by design). Scaler receives MIDI from your DAW and can transform it. Hi seems there’s some confusion here about the MIDI routing and what you can do with Scaler. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |