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AlphaSphere, Spherical Music Controller, Becomes Messe Favorite; Keyboard Mag Video Hands-on

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Music trade shows are typically full of sensible and useful instruments. They may not always represent something revolutionary, but people find homes for them in their musical lives. Of course, the world’s fair futurist in us may want something really different.

It was a real treat to get my hands on the AlphaSphere, a UK-engineered alternative instrument that maps pitch across touch-sensitive surfaces arrayed in a sphere. It’s what a lot of people were talking about at Messe when people asked “what’s cool?”, as friends rounded up friends to march them over to the booth. (It’s Hall 5.1, stand C27 if you happen to be there this weekend.) The rubbery round sensors are actually really fun to play.

I hope to catch up with these lads from Bristol either in the UK or back in Berlin, but in the meantime, check out Keyboard Magazine’s video of the demo. It’s not as slick as the promo video, but you get a sense of the co-inventor’s real enthusiasm. (I shot the video as I’m contributing to Keyboard‘s Messe coverage.)

More:
http://www.alphasphere.com/

Previously (not spheres, but a similar idea – minus the continuous pressure):
Dodecahedronists, Unite: An Audiovisual Controller, Gestures and Polyhedra, Open Hardware

Official video (I like the white):


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What cord do I need to use my keyboard as a midi controller to the computer?

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Question by ghettosteez: What cord do I need to use my keyboard as a midi controller to the computer?
I have an Alesis Micron keyboard and would like to use it as a midi controller to control functions on Ableton Live on my computer and do things like step sequencing.
What kind of cord do I need and where can I find it?

Best answer:

Answer by Charlie
One or two MIDI cables, depending on how many ins and outs the Alesis Micron has. Do you have a soundcard with MIDI connections too, because you’ll need them to use your keyboard as a MIDI controller? You should find them in a local music equipment shop or lots of places online.

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Evo, Keyboard with Added Dimension of Touch-Sensing Keys, Evolves

Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

Endeavour’s Evo Series One, which we looked at in the fall, does something different with the conventional keyboard: it adds a touch-sensitive surface to the top of the keys, allowing you to run your fingers up and down the keys for added expression. I got a chance to try the Evo today, and I’m impressed. The first feeling is strange: the keys have an action more like an electric keyboard (Rhodes, etc.), and the keys are atypically tall. But as you begin to play, it makes sense: this isn’t a piano for playing Liszt; it’s a unique, hybrid interface. The added length gives you more touch surface to play, and it is possible to get used to a slightly-adjusted playing style without too much effort. In exchange, you get this new dimension of expression – without awkward wiggling motions on the keys or the imprecision of aftertouch.

The Series One has been on sale for a couple of months, but there were a couple of significant revelations today.

First, Endeavour is building their own software. There’s a bridge tool (currently for Mac, with Windows next) that lets you pipe both OSC and MIDI to other programs. That software is free and open source, if you want to do more with it, and you can also get native OSC right out of the keyboard. Endeavour is also building their own, custom synthesizer to take advantage of the added dimension of playability in the input; I saw a Reaktor patch, but it’ll ship as standalone software.

Second, and perhaps most importantly, they’re working on a much more affordable version. The hand-built, unique Series One is a whopping 2700 €, but by the end of the year, we should see something smaller and in a lower price range. (I heard a number I can’t repeat, but that I liked.)

Check out the sound demos at top for a feel of what this can do – and you can see a glimpse of some of the possibilities, as well as the scale of the hardware, in the images below of the device and its editing software.

Previously:
Tactile Touch: Evo Keyboard to Marry Touch Expression, Conventional Keys

Note: my hands aren’t the best way to get scale, as I have relatively small hands. Liszt was always a bit of a stretch.

More editing functionality in their videos:
https://vimeo.com/endeavourgmbh/videos


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Not a Tablet: Android-Powered Touch Music Keyboard is Just for Music

Monday, March 12th, 2012

Looking a bit like the love child of a Nintendo DS and a microKORG, the Miselu neiro is a different animal in mobile music. The upcoming device is powered by Android and has a touchscreen – a bit like a tablet – but it’s hardware dedicated to music-making, complete with a compact, piano-layout keyboard. The gamble is that people wanting to make mobile music will choose this dedicated device instead of a general-purpose gadget like an iPad.

Whether they can pull it off or not is a big question, but in the meantime, the specs are intriguing. And it’s worth mentioning now, because if you’re reading this from Austin, Texas, there’s still time to check out the Miselu in person at SoundCloud’s open house. (I’m in Berlin, so I just have to pour myself a beer, stare at the gallery, and munch on some barbeque and pretend.)

Here’s what we know:

  • Connected: The creators call it a “network-enabled mobile companion,” so online connections and “social” interaction are part of the plan. That includes, out of the gate, SoundCloud.
  • Internal DSP: The neiro will include the Yamaha AudioEngine Series Sound Chip NSX-1, a dedicated DSP for synthesis and signal processing. (Now, the creators say that “almost matches the sound of real musical instruments,” but while DSP chips add predictable horsepower, native processing remains competitive.)
  • I/O: Product mock-ups show USB (2x), HDMI, audio in and out (stereo minijacks), and, in a nod to the Atari ST, dedicated MIDI DIN jacks. There’s also an SD card slot.
  • Custom software: Retronyms, makers of the popular iOS modular app Tabletop, have already revealed that they’ll be doing a custom app for this platform; see their blog post on the announcement and image below. (Thanks to Freesoulvw for the tip!)
  • Platform: The hardware is an “open platform environment” that will run custom apps and “solutions,” say the creators. Exactly what that means, we’ll have to see, but of course Android does offer application deployment possibilities (even outside of Google’s Android Market, now called Google Play).

http://www.miselu.com/products/

Before the Android aspect of this invites skepiticsm, the big challenge with Android has been unpredictability with OEM-delivered hardware. While the audio API doesn’t work in the way many of us would like, if you do have dedicated hardware with predictable performance, you can side-step many of those problems, so the possibility of music-focused gear has always been interesting.

I think the real challenge is whether this keyboard can stand up to an iPad in a custom keyboard housing. Akai recently demonstrated the clever solution of adding a 4×4 set of MPC-style drum pads just by designing them into an iPad case. In order to compete, Miselu will have to do something unique both with the hardware and software add-ons; they have to actually be better at what the iPad does, not just “as good.”

On the other hand, just looking at the ports they’ve got on the prototype could easily make you drool. If they nail the hardware and get this out the door, there could be some real possibilities with this.

Of course, there’s far more we don’t know than do know about this, but that just means it’ll be interesting to watch. See some pictures, teaser video, and check out the site.

Okay, now we’re interested. Yes, it’ll have a tasty-looking xox drum sequencer, courtesy (previously iOS-only mobile) devs Retronyms.

I missed the chance to write about it, but I’d be curious to know what happened to the KDJ-ONE, a Linux-powered dedicated music-maker that seemed a bit like the love child of an oversized classic Game Boy and a tracker, as seen last year on Synthtopia.


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Q&A: I was wondering how to get sounds from my keyboard on to my fl studio?

Sunday, March 11th, 2012

Question by : I was wondering how to get sounds from my keyboard on to my fl studio?
I have fl studio and sonar but I really only use fl studio for now and I was wondering what it would it would take to use the sounds from my keyboard instead of using fl studio sounds and vst’s, do i have to buy anything extra? If i do, what is it? I already have a fast track pro interface if that helps! Thanks

Best answer:

Answer by Atlas99
You mean like plug the output of the keyboard into the input audio jack of the pc and record on fast track?

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Q&A: Plug In Keyboard into Computer to Work with Fruity Loops 8?

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

Question by Joe Brooke: Plug In Keyboard into Computer to Work with Fruity Loops 8?
Hey!

I was just wondering if you could plug in a keyboard (Electric Piano) into the USB port and it be compatible with Fruity Loops 8. I’ve recently downloaded the program and I’m still getting to grips with it!

Thanks a lot in advance :)

Best answer:

Answer by Adam
Hi….sorry…but no idea…

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How Can I get the SOUNDS FROM my casio keyboard on to fruity loops so i can use them?

Friday, February 17th, 2012

Question by John J: How Can I get the SOUNDS FROM my casio keyboard on to fruity loops so i can use them?
I have my casio keyboard connected to my computer,but it only controls the fruity loop sounds.i wanted to know is there a way i can have the fruity loop sounds AND the sounds from my keyboard..because the sounds on my keyboard sound a little better.

Best answer:

Answer by junglejungle
take the line out from the music keyboard into the pc, line in.

fruity loops supports audio recording? i’m a cubase + reason user, so wouldn’t know.

although remember to keep the midi notation as well as the audio side.

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i have cubase essential 5 and i want to connect my keyboard via usb to midi help?

Tuesday, February 14th, 2012

Question by : i have cubase essential 5 and i want to connect my keyboard via usb to midi help?
i am trying to connect my keyboard (triton le work staion) to my pc (toshiba 4g 250 d) with cubase via m audio midi to usb interface with one input and out
please help me set this up i am new to cubase set ups
i was using a mac before new to pc as well i want to use the sounds in cubase to get middi in please help

Best answer:

Answer by soundmagus
Hi,

you need to get 2 midi cables.

From the Triton you need to do the following :

Midi out > Midi In on sound card
Midi in >Midi out on sound card

Then when you open Cubase make sure you select the appropriate midi ins/outs in the inspector (to the left of the arrangement page).

hope this helps,

Mark

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I just bought a yamaha 310 keyboard. I want to make beats with it. Is it a good keyboard to make beats?

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Question by startrak_06: I just bought a yamaha 310 keyboard. I want to make beats with it. Is it a good keyboard to make beats?
What midi software do i need for it?

Best answer:

Answer by mac4life2death
Fl studio, cubase/nuendo, Reason. logic (mac), cakewalk and more.

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Q&A: Best keyboard for making hip-hop beats?

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Question by b_garland86: Best keyboard for making hip-hop beats?
I’m looking into buying a keyboard to produce hip hop beats. What are the best brands to look into?

Best answer:

Answer by mindabovematter
If your looking for a stand alone keyboard you should look into Yamaha. They make excellent keyboards for both piano playing, electronica, and or hip-hop. They have some very good samples and you can upload more. Some of them have the ability to record built in as well.

For the above, check Yamaha, Roland, Korg.

If you’re using a computer to record and make your beats you’ll need a MIDI controller keyboard. These are usually USB or Firewire plug ins that control a function/sound/or sound grouping with the touch of the keys. This will activate whatever sound or sample you select. You can use it as a keyboard/piano or assign a different drum/sound to each key.

For the above check M-Audio, Akai. Roland and Korg make these types as well.

For beat making whichever type you decide on you should look into getting one that has pads on them. The pads are smallish squares that you can hit to produce a sound, mostly drum sounds. The good pads have dynamics built in, meaning that the harder you hit the louder and more focused the sound will be. If you hit it lightly, it will be softer and more mellow.

Good Luck!

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