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#500721 - 09/19/20 11:05 AM
 
Re: The state of the art?
[Re: rolandfan]
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Senior Member
 
 
Registered:  06/04/02
 
Posts: 4912
 
Loc:  West Palm Beach, FL 33417
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Diki wrote: “As so many of we arranger players are elderly, it’s a cruel disease that targets us disproportionately.”
  After I read this my mind substituted the words,  “The state of the art”, in place of cruel disease. 
  Wow,23 replays, I am not talking about the virus, it is the technology, I am lost with the subject, and it keeps coming. (smile)
  In my younger days I did the same thing, just feel like complaining. Have a great day, John C 
 
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#500741 - 09/21/20 08:49 AM
 
Re: The state of the art?
[Re: Diki]
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Member
 
 
Registered:  04/28/06
 
Posts: 874
 
Loc:  North Texas, USA
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I am often surprised at how little some of the features I consider essential get used by many players. [...]
  I can understand to a certain extent those that have only really mastered the one finger chord/one finger to solo playing style
    Hey, I resemble that remark!    Honestly, that describes me pretty well.  On most of the songs that I play, the chords change subtly from one verse to another, often enough that it doesn't seem worthwhile to record them.  And if I make a mistake the first time through, then I couldn't replay the recorded sequence anyhow.  My first keyboards didn't have a bender, or even a sustain pedal.  To this day I have no clue how to use those!  I couldn't afford a G1000 when they first came out.  PSRs and early Korgs didn't have a chord sequencer.  So the BK9 I bought last year was my first keyboard with a C.S.  You can't learn to use what you never had! Because I'm not good at comping or adding grace notes, multipad-triggered arps and chromatic phrases have more value to me in terms of enrichment and variety (because I couldn't play those arps and phrases in real-time, even with both hands!) Since I *am* a left hand chords, right hand solo type of guy, chord sequencers lie on a "slippery slope"... With overuse of the C.S., pretty soon you're not really "playing" -- you might as well just turn on a MIDI or mp3.  If single-finger chords driving a pattern-based accompainment is the musical equivalent of automatic transmission, then C.S. + multipads would be like Tesla autopilot! Getting back to crucial features that aren't used by many players: I also like to edit styles, revoice them, simplify the bassline, etc.  I make heavy use of sync stop and/or arranger hold "off," so that the sound ceases when I release the keys.  "Free play" styles were a game changer too, although there's nothing really different or magical about them; they're just a specific use of the functionality that was already there.  But- not all arrangers, especially the entry-level models, offer these possibilities.  When friends ask me about keyboards, I tell them to beg, borrow, or steal to step up to a mid-range model. Even an older one.  Because I just can't understand how anyone would play certain types of music without these options!  
  Edited by TedS (09/21/20 06:38 PM)
 
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