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Starship Krupa

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Posts posted by Starship Krupa

  1. Need current system specs.

    Not that we're looking to point fingers, but with performance issues like this, we need to know better what we're dealing with.

    OS, CPU, RAM, disk, video, make and model of audio interface is the minimum amount of info I need before I can take a guess or give suggestions. See my sig for an idea of a full list of pertinent system info.

    Download and install HWInfo64 and Latency Monitor, 'cause we're gonna be asking you to use them.

    Also, did anything else happen with your system around the time Cakewalk started acting up? System update, install new software (program or plug-in or utility)?

  2. 50 minutes ago, CSistine said:

    Player installation => online!

    Not a problem here.

    My only gripe about online installation/registration is that there seems to be a trend with install/update managers (Native Access, looking at you) not to store username or password. So every time I want to check for updates I have to enter them again. I. do. not. like. this.

    I guess it's to deter people from installing the softwareses on their friends' systems. Protection of the (intellectual) property at the cost of inconveniencing the honest.

  3. 6 hours ago, Glenn Stanton said:

    i use the drum map simply to have the names, not that i'm mapping anything specific)

    That's usually all I'm ever seeking. All external gear I have conforms to Yamaha XG or Alesis mapping.

  4. 25 minutes ago, Sheens said:

    This will be one of my last posts as a normal person.

    I'll be writing you soon from a white sand beach, surrounded by beautiful girls in bikinis.

    I can't remember who first said this, but I'll know I'm successful when beautiful women whose names I don't know are walking around my house wearing nothing but my shirts.

    • Haha 1
  5. 9 hours ago, kennywtelejazz said:

    So for me what they call music now simply does not hold the appeal it may as it does for younger people ....I'm just not into watching a scantly dressed singer lip syncing while shaking her booty with 50 back up dancers evading explosions and streams of light ...

    Nothing new under the sun.

    Even now-beloved acts have attracted such shade.

    "I'm just not into watching some trumpet player turn his back on the audience and spew whatever notes are in the mode while his piano player vamps over two chords."

    "I'm just not into watching four guys with mop hairdos brang away at simplistic 3-chord tripe at ear-splitting volume while a bunch of screaming teenage girls wet their panties."

    "I'm just not into watching a bunch of Australian has-been Beatle wannabes trying to pander to the latest trend."

    (not implying that what you are hatin' on is in a league with messrs. Davis, Lennon, McCartney, Harrison, Starkey, and Gibb, I'm right with you there😄)

    So where are you seeing these scantily clad prostitots? On TV? Has that ever been a way of finding great music (except for the aforementioned mop hairdo guys)? Since the 60's, when Rat Pack geniuses had their own shows, it's mostly been lowest common denominator, with the exception of a few weekend graveyard shift programs and an all music video channel that switched to reality shows.

    Y'know, "Oh boy, my little sister is spazzing out because her favorite airhead is on Sonny and Cher."

    Back in the day, I wasn't into watching Paul Anka sing about how cool it was that he knocked up his old lady. Nor was I into Debbie Boone screeching about someone lighting up her life. But they were all over TV and radio.

    (oddly enough, I've found some GREAT stuff recently being used under closing credits for streaming series, go figure. Storefront Church for Beach Boy lovers, Lil' Yachty for Tame Impala lovers)

    Kids These Days don't make music in a vacuum either. Talk to some of them. You might be surprised at what they say.

  6. 11 hours ago, X-53mph said:

    I'll explain a bit more clearly from my own personal experience.

    Excellent rebuttal/rant. Let the jibba-jabba flow.

    On the consumer side:

    Sigh. Yeah. I even agree with what you're saying, coming from your...uh....current perspective. It IS harder in some ways. And we're older and not surrounded by a network of rabid music fans the way we once were.

    But that's what I mean about having to work. For the kind of music that excites me today, I have dug up good curated streams. It helps that the electronic music I'm into now still has a good current following. Platforms like Bandcamp have blogs that talk about promising artists, YouTube makes recommendations, etc.

    And for SURE, it ain't always about finding stuff that's current. Some of the stuff that I've found recently was originally produced 5, 10 20 or 30 years ago. It's new to me and that's what I want.

    Also this tool, Music-Map, is a fun and useful way to find artists who are working in the same genres you're seeking out. Put in anything you want and it will find something that has similar elements.

    Artist side:

    As far as the revenue streams and curation and finding audiences and audiences finding artists, we're still in the midst of a HUGE shift. For fans of The Expanse, we're in what Amos called the Churn. An upheaval that some will survive and some will not. Who knows what the future holds? Things can shift very quickly in the entertainment realm. How long ago was it that Netflix was competing with Blockbuster?

    I say what I say because I'm one of those annoying glass half-full people.

    Creating a brand and story, well, it's there on Bandcamp and YouTube. Superabbit is a person who lives on an island and makes music. Even that much can be interesting to people. Or not.

    Musicians becoming rich never happened until fairly recently in human history. Even my idol and namesake, Gene Krupa, who revolutionized playing the drum kit the way that Eddie Van Halen revolutionized playing the guitar (and had as much or more involvement in its development as Les Paul did for guitar). Krupa wound up teaching drums in New York (supposedly Peter Criss was one of his students).

    Even making a decent living has always been difficult for the majority of players. Coffee house gigs. Teaching. The people we consider the great composers had rich people who just gave them money to sit around and compose. Mozart's funeral? Dusted with lime and dumped in a common grave.

    Right now you're one crispy critter, and believe me, I've been there, with many formerly beloved pursuits. I stepped away for however long it took to come back to it when/if I wanted to do it for the love of it. That's what I did after my last band imploded. In its meagre way, it was the best shot I ever had at coming up through the old record company/gigging/radio play system (when bartenders and sound people stop you during loadout to say that they really liked your set, job well done). Walked away with my head down, hardly played a note for about 5 years. (I did get what many dudes want from being in a band, a cutie pie girlfriend) Then I happened to buy a house with a rental cottage out back occupied by....a piano teacher. Never played keys before, never really worked theory, but what the heck, eh?

    It retriggered my interest in music to the point that my next career was starting my own pedal building and amp design and repair business. Also got a sweet musician girlfriend. All of those things are gone now, but the interest in making music remains.

    The old hippie "if you love something set it free, if it comes back to you, etc." might apply here.

    Who knows? Do we choose music or does music choose us? It seems it won't friggin' leave me alone.😄

  7. I mentioned/requested this several years ago.

    With the impending launch of Cakewalk Sonar and Next, can we FINALLY get t-shirts and coffee mugs and laptop stickers?

    In my opinion, much marketing opportunity was lost over the past 6 years by not having these things.

    If I had a Cakewalk t-shirt I would wear it everywhere! Best way to connect with other people who are using the program. Laptop stickers, too.

    I suspect we'd all like to connect with other people around our communities who are using CbB or Sonar or Next.

    How about it? It ain't hard to do, I went to Zazzle and created one for my own company and it took me about an hour to put together the logo and get them up on the store. And Cakewalk already has the logos ready to go. If you do it through Zazzle, they automatically make the logo available on shirts, hoodies, coffee mugs, fridge magnets, stickers of various sizes, a wide array of goodies.

    Aside from spreading the brand recognition, Cakewalk would probably sell a LOT of stuff.

  8. Just now, craigb said:

    As for the Ketamine lozenges, those are meant for a very different issue

    One that I, unfortunately, suffer from. It is VERY treatment-resistant, as the term goes (as if it's the fault of the disorder rather than the failure of the effort to treat it).

    2 minutes ago, craigb said:

    I, personally, recommend against using Ketamine except in rare circumstances and under the guidance of a qualified medical person.

    My circumstances are, unfortunately among the rare ones I believe you are referring to. And as a recovering substance abuser I have to be really really vigilant about possible relapse triggers. So my treatment is under the care of not one but two physicians.

    • Like 1
  9. On 4/20/2024 at 11:17 PM, Rain said:

    I always remember my few months in Russia very fondly because of the people

    You might like the TETRIS movie that came out recently. Most of it takes place in Moscow and involves a friendship between an American entrepreneur and the Russian programmer who created TETRIS. As part of the business dealings that led to TETRIS coming to the rest of the world and doing more to damage productivity in Capitalist countries than any other subversion could have.😄

    I have a love for the Russian people in general just because of how much of the world's bacon their forebears saved as the Eastern Front in WWII. Germany having to fight on two fronts, and one of them being Napoleon's bane.

    I get tears thinking about the awful way so many of those heroic soldiers and partisans were treated by the Stalinist government. Plenty of them, their only crime was being shown mercy by German soldiers who realized that they were already beaten and let them go after capturing them (imagine being treated better by Nazis than your own government). And then the decades of Animal Farm nastiness that followed.

    I was first made aware of it via this song by Al Stewart, a favorite of my pre-teen years. It's an ode to those brave boys and girls:

     

    • Like 1
  10. https://www.westwoodinstruments.com/roots/

    I've Bapu'd it and can vouch for its usefulness for evolving dark ambient and cinematic textures. I'd say that between this and Soundpaint's free libraries, you've got ambient drone-in-box.

    And it looks as if Westwood will be doing what others have started doing and releasing future free Player instruments in this line, so sign up for their newsletter if you want to stay informed.

    Kontakt-aware peeplz: did NI change the licensing for Player instruments recently? Because I'm starting to see a LOT more Player-compatible instruments for free. It used to be that the creator of any Player-compatible instrument had to cough up a fee to NI for doing so. Has that been relaxed?

    If so, good idea, because it's an excellent way to raise interest in Kontakt. Always has been, they just botched it. I wouldn't have installed or been aware of Kontakt if it hadn't been for DrumMic'a back in the day. Unfortunately, Sennheiser eventually decided it wasn't worth it and stopped issuing licenses. DrumMic'a was both an excellent free drum instrument and also worked for its intended use as a showcase for Sennheiser's line of microphones.

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 4
    • Sad 1
  11. Peet's Columbian. I usually prefer to grind my own, but for this, I make an exception.

    Peet's headquarters and roastery is here in the town of Alameda, and is probably the business I'm most proud of being local, except of course for the mighty Ole's Waffle Shop.

    @craigb So I should take acid before bed to avoid acid reflux? I have some prescription ketamine lozenges, would those work as well? 😄

  12. I recently got Addictive Drums, and was surprised that Cakewalk doesn't come with a drum map for this. Given that SONAR Platinum came with a license for AD, this seems odd.

    I'm sure someone has already created a nice one, if so, please share it.

  13. On 4/20/2024 at 7:09 AM, Thomas Batone said:

    Cakewalk Bandlab will seemingly not recognise my rather unfortunate old user name Bobguitkillerleft

    If you're able to post on the forum, you have a valid BandLab account, and THAT is the one you need to use when Cakewalk by BandLab asks you to authenticate.

    Your BandLab account, which you use for the forum, Cakewalk by BandLab, and all other things BandLab, is completely separate from your old Cakewalk account.

    The old Cakewalk username and password are only good for downloading older versions of the software like SONAR.

    If you forget the password for your old Cakewalk account, BandLab support can help you reset it.

  14. 2 hours ago, Notes_Norton said:

    I'm in that wordless place where there is no space, no time and no me, just the music feeling like it's flowing through me, instead of from me, and the energy from the audience feeding back to me.

    Some might think I'm weird, and I wouldn't disagree.

    I envy you if you're able to enter and stay in that zone regularly. It's one of the best feelings there is.

    With my current focus on electronic music, I've long been thinking about how to do it live. I've messed about with loop and phrase launchers and seemed to have a good instinctual feel for it, but I've not yet made a framework for it that I'd feel confident actually performing.

    • Like 1
  15. On 4/19/2024 at 9:06 PM, bmarlowe said:

    Thanks much for that Starship - had not thought of that at all.

    If you try it, please post back in this topic how it went.

    I tried BandLab a few times in the first few years and didn't see much use for it for my needs, but I'm sure it keeps getting improved.

  16. 12 hours ago, mettelus said:

    MStereoSpread will generate stereo via either classic delay or via Melda's spectral generator. The spectral generator shifts frequency content randomly to one speaker while compensating the other, which allows for things to sit in the "same space" yet avoid frequency collisions (in a stereo field). Caveat to this is the spectral generation will always collapse to mono perfectly, so be sure to consider that (and frequency collisions) depending on intended playback systems.

    This is relevant to my interests.

    The MStereo FX are very confusing to try to sort out. I had a piece of mono audio last week that I wanted to stereoize and decided to turn MeldaProduction loose on it. I didn't get any results that pleased me. I get better results with MSpectralPan I'll try MStereoSpread again.

    My go-to's for that work are Polyverse Wider 2 and JS Sidewidener.

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