Originally posted by Tonewheeldude:
Honestly Ian, I spent best part of a day with you on this (which I enjoyed - don't get me wrong), I checked the chords as you asked, posted the findings and posted an MP3 (which you couldn't even be bothered to comment on, other than wanting something different) the progression had many different inversions and complex chords showing how the Audya works in a 'real life' situation.
Its all getting VERY BORING listening to the same old oppinions based on very old demos and comparing chalk to cheese. (you decide which is which)
).]
Sorry my posts bore you, so perhaps it's best you don't read them or reply to them.
I wasn't addressing the last question to you...I realize you posted an MP3 with the guitars but they were a bit hidden by the loud and strong bass and drums.
If you read my question above, you would find that it wasn't anything you answered...I'm still wondering if the audio guitars will play using the root of the chord, or the proper "guitar" bass note when playing an on bass, or slash chord, like C/E, Dm/G...etc. These would be played with all other tracks, including the bass and drums, OFF,
I start several of my songs using just the guitar track in the style, and playing a chord progression like, C...Cmaj7th/B, Am...Am7th/G...F...Fmaj7th/E...Dm...Dm7th/C and so on...the guitar track plays and the guitar chords play the desending root...it works well as an intro, sometimes I leave the string pad track on in the style to flesh it out.
I don't want you to post anything, but I was hoping another Audya player/owner might have kept the original MP3's that were uploaded awhile ago, and featured ONLY the guitar track, and how the audio and midi parts worked together.
My questions aren't meant to put down the Audya, as much as they are based on my curiousity about the Audya's audio guitars actually having different loops for different inversions such as a Cmaj7th loop and a seperate Cmaj7th/B loop.
I couldn't really hear the guitars on your recording, but I do thank you for the effort, and I hope you enjoy the instrument...the concept is brilliant.
Ian