With the house in somewhat reasonable shape and the kids asleep I took another try at making some music by layering multiple parts. Looks like I last tried this five years ago. Since then I've figured out enough Reaper that I'm not using Audacity, but there are probably still a lot of things I'm doing wrong.
- Frank's Reel (mp3)
- On the Danforth (mp3)
Latency is also painful. The time from sound going into microphone or MIDI until it comes out of the headphones is something like 100ms. [2] When playing fully electronic instruments I'm able to listen to this delayed output and compensate as if I'm playing a slow-to-sound instrument. This quickly becomes unconscious, but my timing isn't as precise as with a real low-latency instrument. For acoustic instruments like mandolin, though, I need to manually align the track and it's hard to get it right. I'm not sure what's going wrong here.
Update 2018-07-08: in trying to demonstrate to Hollis that I'd tried all the settings I found the one I needed to tweak: Preferences > Audio > Device > Request block size. I needed to lower it from 1024 to 32.
Mostly I'm using this as a way to get a sense for how to play my new saxophones: what sort of rhythmic patterns sound good? Where should it fall in the music? At some point I want to figure out if I can do some of these patterns with multiple fingers at once to imitate playing two horns.
[1] I also continue to be bitter that Presonus dropped the ability to
run live sound from the VSL1818 a couple years after I bought it.
"VSL" stands for "Virtual Studio Live" and the whole idea was that you
could use a laptop plus the VSL to get the capability of their big
Studio Live boards. Which is why I bought it.
[2] I looked for buffer settings and there don't seem to be any? "Decrease the buffer size" is definitely the advice I would give to someone else who came to me with this problem. I'm restarting the computer before working, and don't have other applications open (though background programs are still running).
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