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Jerry Gerber

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Posts posted by Jerry Gerber

  1. I think so.  I've been testing it this afternoon and it's a delight.  So much better with snap than without.  As soon as the official new version is  released I'll install it on my DAW.  My first upgrade since the final version of Sonar....Yippee!!

     

     

    • Like 1
  2. 7 hours ago, msmcleod said:

    And it's here....
     

     

     

    Fantastic!  I've been trying it out and I'm pleased that the staff view FINALLY has its snap-function restored.  This really helps a lot!!!

    Can't wait to finish testing and then install it on my DAW...

    Thank you!

    Jerry

     

    • Like 4
  3. 2 hours ago, DeeringAmps said:

    Stellar as always Jerry.
    Beautiful soundstage, what do you use for the ambiance?
    (have I asked this before...)

    tom

    Hi Tom,

    By ambience, do you mean reverberation?   I am pretty sure for that piece I used the Yamaha SPX-2000 reverb...

    Thanks for listening!

    Jerry

     

    • Thanks 1
  4. It works on my system as expected.  When I click on any note already on the staff the duration changes to that note's duration when I enter a new note.

    Maybe try a reinstall?

    But wait!  I am still using the very last version of Sonar.  I hope they didn't mess that one up, it's extremely useful...

  5. 21 hours ago, msmcleod said:

    No definite date yet I'm afraid, as we've got a major amount of documentation and localisation to complete.

    I anticipate an early access release to be announced within the next couple of weeks though ( no promises tho, as it's not my decision ! )

    I can confirm that fixes for both the snap & the right click issues will be in that release (i.e. you no longer need to hold CTRL to multiple drag or get the full context menu).

    The downside of the right click change is that right clicking will no longer clear the selection (this was in fact the original cause of the issue). So you'll either need to left click somewhere where the no-entry sign appears, or use CTRL+SHIFT+A to clear the selection.

     

    Well, that is really good news, and God knows we can use some good news these days.  I look forward to installing the new release when it becomes available!

    Thanks,

    Jerry

     

     

    • Like 1
  6. On 7/10/2020 at 6:54 PM, msmcleod said:

    @jieva - the snap issue is fixed for the next release, but I'm struggling to find a situation where CTRL + right click is any different from right click... can you give an example?

    Hi msmcleod,

    Any idea when the next update with the staff view snap function repair will be released?

    Thanks,

    Jerry

  7. On 7/10/2020 at 6:54 PM, msmcleod said:

    @jieva - the snap issue is fixed for the next release, but I'm struggling to find a situation where CTRL + right click is any different from right click... can you give an example?

    Yes.  In the staff view, if you lasso and select a group of notes to edit, say you want to increase their velocity.  Sonar always worked by right-clicking to bring up the context menu from which you can choose velocity and perform the edit.  But now, if you do that, the selection disappears, so you have to press CTRL AND right-click in order to keep that from happening.  It's a shorter step to not have to press CTRL and have it work the way it did in Sonar.  Adding time or having to move your other hand to press CTRL might seem like no big deal, but over time, these extra steps really add up.  I hope you change it back.  I don't understand how anybody could object to making an operation quicker to perform by removing one additional keystroke...

    Thanks!

    Jerry

  8. I have no idea what genre this is in.  I write what I want to hear and others can classify it any way they want to.   I've had companies online selling my albums calling them "dance music"  😜

    I actually believe that all the music in the universe comes from the same source and each and every musician is trying to interpret it and feel it based on their own experience, inspiration, training, culture, etc.   

    Thanks again for listening!

    Jerry

    • Like 1
  9. Pressing CTRL and right--click requires 2 hands.  Right-clicking alone requires only one hand.  When you're doing a lot of editing moving both hands to call up a menu takes more time.  The workaround is to keybind the context menu operations you use and then just press one key to call them up. 

  10. On 7/7/2020 at 11:33 PM, Trensharo said:

    The Staff View has lots of issues, and I could never use it for composition.  It's one of the main reasons why I started looking into other DAWs.  It's barely usable, AFAIC.

    The issue is not people misunderstanding what the Staff View is for. It's the fact that it's actually quite bad.  Issues with the Staff View, and people asking for improvements, date back a decade or more.

    The fact that someone was able to trudge along in it to produce a lot of music doesn't alter the reality of the situation.  That's great to hear, but it's not going to make me want to use it.  I've already been there, and I'm not revisiting any time soon.

    Cakewalk's Staff View makes REAPER's Notation Editor look like Sibelius | Ultimate.  It's that bad in comparison, and the gulf was that wide the second REAPER added this feature, when SONAR had it for like 10+ years.

    It needs improvement, IMHO.

    Literally no one is asking for this.  People are seeing what's in other DAWs and comparing to that.

    1. Cubase
    2. Digital Performer
    3. Logic Pro X
    4. Pro Tools
    5. Samplitude Pro
    6. REAPER

    etc. all have better Staff View/Notation Editors than Cakewalk.  Even MixCraft has better notation editing than Cakewalk.

    This isn't a situation of misguided expectations.  This component is just not that good, and it's been this way for a long time.

    I am not sure what they're going to do to improve it, or if they even care to improve it, because that market is already dominated by Cubase Pro and Logic Pro X, anyways.  How much do they stand to gain from investing in improving Staff View?

     

     

  11. I agree.  When the snap function is fixed, the staff view will be on par with every other DAW that I've used or tried.  The newest DAW to notation, Studio One looks promising due to the dynamic symbols being linked to MIDI cc data, but the dealbreaker is that Studio One doesn't seem to have an Event List.  Every DAW has an event list, it's one of the most useful tools for working with cc data,  and copying and pasting notes, program changes and cc data all at the same time. 

    Even without the snap function working, I still have gotten pretty fast at entering notes.  Enlarging the staff helps. 

    I've been using Cakewalk since 1992 and have never even once used the piano-roll view.  As you pointed out,  for polyphonic music with a lot of counterpoint, nothing beats notation.

    Jerry

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  12. I downloaded Reaper a few years ago and tried it for a week and found it counter-intuitive.  Powerful and comprehensive, yes, but in my 32 years of using software, music and otherwise, I have found the best software is designed so well that even without reading the manual (which I always do) you can start to work in it right away.  A software program's power and capabilities must be matched by an elegant simplicity in terms of actually using it (reminds me of a comment a musician one said about Mozart's music:  So simple a child can enjoy it and so sophisticated it will appeal to most learned musician).  I didn't find this with Reaper.  But, once again, to each his own, everyone is going to have a different reaction to an app in regard to whether it fits their requirements or not. 

    I also looked at Studio One recently.  No event list?  Every DAW has an event list, an absolute must for keeping track of program changes, cc changes and other types of MIDI events.

     

  13. 4 hours ago, Tobias said:

    You make valid points, but I feel I must point out that you are dead wrong about spinach. Spinach is objectively horrible! 

    I'm drafting legislation now to make eating it punishable by no more than 60 days in jail and/or a $500 fine.  That'll take care of it!

     

  14. 12 hours ago, Trensharo said:

    The Staff View has lots of issues, and I could never use it for composition.  It's one of the main reasons why I started looking into other DAWs.  It's barely usable, AFAIC.

    The issue is not people misunderstanding what the Staff View is for. It's the fact that it's actually quite bad.  Issues with the Staff View, and people asking for improvements, date back a decade or more.

    The fact that someone was able to trudge along in it to produce a lot of music doesn't alter the reality of the situation.  That's great to hear, but it's not going to make me want to use it.  I've already been there, and I'm not revisiting any time soon.

    Cakewalk's Staff View makes REAPER's Notation Editor look like Sibelius | Ultimate.  It's that bad in comparison, and the gulf was that wide the second REAPER added this feature, when SONAR had it for like 10+ years.

    It needs improvement, IMHO.

    Literally no one is asking for this.  People are seeing what's in other DAWs and comparing to that.

    1. Cubase
    2. Digital Performer
    3. Logic Pro X
    4. Pro Tools
    5. Samplitude Pro
    6. REAPER

    etc. all have better Staff View/Notation Editors than Cakewalk.  Even MixCraft has better notation editing than Cakewalk.

    This isn't a situation of misguided expectations.  This component is just not that good, and it's been this way for a long time.

    I am not sure what they're going to do to improve it, or if they even care to improve it, because that market is already dominated by Cubase Pro and Logic Pro X, anyways.  How much do they stand to gain from investing in improving Staff View?

    Just because you haven't learned to use it is no reason to project and say it's unusable.  It's unusable FOR YOU.    I don't like spinach, that's a subjective truth.  But I cannot say that spinach is objectively bad, I can only say I don't like it.    I used Digital Performer's QuickScribe for 18 months, every day.  It's not any better than Cakewalk; it has a few features that are better, but Cakewalk has features that are better for composition for me.    How could a classically-trained composer who has produced 14 albums and over 750 soundtrack cues work in the staff view if it's "unusable"?  Maybe I know something you don't?  Try to recognize the difference between a subjective evaluation, which you're certainly entitled to, and a overgeneralized sweeping statement that doesn't take into account the experience of others.

     

     

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 1
  15. I forgot to tell you all about the workaround I discovered in the staff view when the snap function gets stuck on 1/32 notes.

    Here it is:  Revert the screen set you're using to its saved version. 

    This will, at least temporarily, fix the snap so that it can be used with larger note values...

    Jerry

    • Like 1
  16. Hi Noyekker,

    Thanks for taking the time to listen, much appreciated..

    I listen to works I've written over the years and always find things I like and don't like about what I did.  That's how I learn, by reacting and analyzing what I did and finding ways to do it better.  It's a never ending journey I suppose.  I like the motivic development in this movement and I think from the standpoint of composition it's an improvement over some of my earlier movements which don't have the degree of structural cohesion that this movement has.  Then again, I might have a listen in several years from now and change my mind. 

    Jerry

     

  17. 35 minutes ago, winkpain said:

    Agreed.

    CW, nor any other DAW, is the right tool for the particular job of writing (certainly not publishing) music notation properly, and I don't expect it to be. That's why I shared my Rewire/Sibelius "workaround". It provides the best of both worlds in a way.

    However, I also agree that it will be a grand day if/when the fantastic folks at CbB have the time to upgrade the Staff View, since there are certainly enough of us who like to work with notation in DAW composition (as this and other threads bear out), or at least like to have it as a viable, full-functioning option.

    I am deeply and continually impressed over this last year with CbB's staff and their unflagging attention to this product and its broad base of constituent users, and I know you can't please everyone, but I highly doubt it is true that, as I read elsewhere here by someone seeming to say "why bother" fixing Staff View when they said there are "easily 100 or more" times as many people who don't use Staff View as those who do. I wonder where they got their data from! And since it remains as part of the program, it seems worthy as any of the other tools for upgrade consideration. 

    As this is the Feedback Loop, that is my feedback.

    But as I say, I'm quite happy working with the Rewire option when needed.

    I've produced 10 symphonies, many short works, songs and 14 albums using the CW staff view.  It works for composition if you are composing in and for the electronic medium. I've used Sibelius for my scores for 15 years or so and will continue to.  The staff view is for MIDI input and editing, and of course, composition. It's not for publishing, preparing final scores or parts or for presenting written music to players for rehearsal, recording or performance.  Once you understand the difference, it's not hard to exploit the staff view for composing.  You can hear numerous recordings I've made in the "Songs" section of this forum and I think you'll agree that for complex arrangements and orchestration the staff view works quite well.  It just needs a few tweaks and bug fixes as we discussed above.

    Jerry

    • Like 3
  18. On 6/24/2020 at 6:17 AM, Wookiee said:

    I listened to the first track and I did enjoy very much thank you for sharing.

    You're welcome!

     

    • Like 1
  19. 3 hours ago, noynekker said:

    Hi Jerry . . . so uplifting to listen to your compositions here on our Cakewalk forum, it's such a journey for the ears, this one is particularly amazing . . . have you ever had your compositions played by a live orchestra ? If that came to my town I would surely go see it !

    Thanks noynekker.  When I was working on my college degree in music composition and theory I heard my works played often by ensembles.  But it's very difficult to get a top orchestra to play long pieces, only about 15% of music programmed in the U.S. by orchestras is by living composers.   If an orchestra wanted to play one of my pieces and offered me both sufficient rehearsal time and a recording of course I would say yes.  But the politics of getting an unknown piece played and recorded are formidable.  I actually am quite content to realize my work electronically as I love working in the digital medium.  I am more interested in music as a recording art than a performance art..

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