crayolon
31.08.2010, 01:40 PM
Hi there :)
I'm busy developing a Virus editor that'll run standalone or as a VSTi, based on the Ctrlr (http://ctrlr.org/index.php) project. I've just finished the first release of my Novation Supernova II controller, which handles most CCs and lots of critical NRPNs; I'm also using a stable build of my Virus B editor in Ableton and Renoise. Other controllers are available to download too, if you want to try them with other hardware.
I'll update this thread when there's a public beta ready for testing. When the Ctrlr codebase gets full patch librarian capabilities (not 100% there yet), I'll implement that too. It's also worth noting that atom (the main Ctrlr dev) is working on making it so that people can tweak their controllers without having to compile the C++ and all that rubbish, which means it'll soon be even easier for people to go nuts on getting exactly what they want :)
Anyway, as well as easy computer-based patch editing, the other huge advantage is exposing internal CC/sysex parameters to sequencers for automation - stuff like Ableton Live, for instance, which is colossally shit at all things midi/sysex/external hardware related, plays happy with this. (I do use Ableton Live, by the way, alongside other stuff, so I made this controller mainly as a result of my own bad experiences).
I've looked at some commercial editors, and it seems some of them don't let you select MIDI ports from within the VST, which is fine if you only have one set of MIDI I/O and also have one of the few DAWs they support...but not so good if you use Renoise, Ableton, or various others which do MIDI differently. I've got about six MIDI I/O on various devices, so it's no problem to load my VSTi, assign I/O to, say, a Midisport 2x2, then treat the hardware just like it was a virtual instrument, with audio coming through on a different track.
UPDATE: first release builds are up for Windows (VSTi .dll and standalone .exe)! Mac OSX builds due to be uploaded tomorrow.
ALL FEEDBACK/BUG-REPORTS GREATLY APPRECIATED!
http://ctrlr.org/page.php?p=download
I'm busy developing a Virus editor that'll run standalone or as a VSTi, based on the Ctrlr (http://ctrlr.org/index.php) project. I've just finished the first release of my Novation Supernova II controller, which handles most CCs and lots of critical NRPNs; I'm also using a stable build of my Virus B editor in Ableton and Renoise. Other controllers are available to download too, if you want to try them with other hardware.
I'll update this thread when there's a public beta ready for testing. When the Ctrlr codebase gets full patch librarian capabilities (not 100% there yet), I'll implement that too. It's also worth noting that atom (the main Ctrlr dev) is working on making it so that people can tweak their controllers without having to compile the C++ and all that rubbish, which means it'll soon be even easier for people to go nuts on getting exactly what they want :)
Anyway, as well as easy computer-based patch editing, the other huge advantage is exposing internal CC/sysex parameters to sequencers for automation - stuff like Ableton Live, for instance, which is colossally shit at all things midi/sysex/external hardware related, plays happy with this. (I do use Ableton Live, by the way, alongside other stuff, so I made this controller mainly as a result of my own bad experiences).
I've looked at some commercial editors, and it seems some of them don't let you select MIDI ports from within the VST, which is fine if you only have one set of MIDI I/O and also have one of the few DAWs they support...but not so good if you use Renoise, Ableton, or various others which do MIDI differently. I've got about six MIDI I/O on various devices, so it's no problem to load my VSTi, assign I/O to, say, a Midisport 2x2, then treat the hardware just like it was a virtual instrument, with audio coming through on a different track.
UPDATE: first release builds are up for Windows (VSTi .dll and standalone .exe)! Mac OSX builds due to be uploaded tomorrow.
ALL FEEDBACK/BUG-REPORTS GREATLY APPRECIATED!
http://ctrlr.org/page.php?p=download