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- Newsgroups: rec.music.makers
- Path: sparky!uunet!jericho!gord
- From: gord@jericho.uucp (Gord Wait)
- Subject: Re: Gravis Ultrasound Daily Digest
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.213811.1019@jericho.uucp>
- Organization: S-MOS Systems, Inc. (Vancouver Design Center)
- References: <1992Dec21.185710.17203@rdg.dec.com>
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 21:38:11 GMT
- Lines: 67
-
- In article <1992Dec21.185710.17203@rdg.dec.com> hedron::daveb writes:
- >
-
- >Gravis told me on the phone that the MIDI interface would support windows
- >midid applications in "the near future". No other information was available
- >from the person I talked to. Does anyone know what midi software they might
- >support? I'm particularly interested in running something like Cakewalk pro and
- >Cool shoes Drummer software.
- >
- >Other impressions of the Gravis, sounds, ease of installation/setups etc. are
- >very welcome.
- >
-
- At the moment, the Gravis Ultrasound windows drivers only support midi
- out. I have tried various windows demo seqencers, as well as the
- multimedia player via both the ultrasound midi out (to my DX7 synth)
- and to the ultrasound on board 32 voice synth, and they work fine out
- the midi port, and 'sort of' work directly to the ultrasound.
-
- Why I say sort of to support for the ultrasound on board synth is that
- most of the windows sequencers do not yet support patch loading. I
- understand this is a feature in the windows multimedia spec. A synth
- like an MT32 has predefined patches in rom, so when you power it up,
- it is ready to play. The ultrasound has no rom, so the patches you
- want to use have to be loaded into the ultrasound via the driver. The
- temporary workaround is to create a short midi file (using general midi
- patch numbering) that calls the patches you would like to use in say,
- wincake; load this midi file using the windows media player (which
- DOES support patch loading), play a short bit of the song (to make the
- patches actually load), then go back to running wincake. This is
- (obviously) fairly awkward.
-
- Gravis is working on a patch loader tool as a better workaround. In
- the long run, the midi sequencer companies will hopefully support
- patch loading, and remove this problem.
-
- Another issue is that Gravis have not yet release a midi adapter for
- use with the ultrasound. Apparently the Soundblaster midi adapter will
- work, but needs a part change to be guaranteed to work. I beleive the
- fix is to change the soundblaster adapter's 6n136 to a 6n138 opto
- isolator. I built my own midi interface out of the parts from my
- ex-amiga midi interface..
-
- I am waiting for the updated windows driver that supports midi
- in before I buy a windows sequencer.
-
- As to the quality, the synth portion sounds pretty good. Some of the
- patches are lousy, some sound great. Since the synth portion uses
- 'sample playback' for sound generation, some of the real instruments
- sound very decent. The basic piano sounds a tone better than my good
- olde DX7. Gravis are supposed to release a new patch set very soon, so
- I hope that it comes with some more good sounds.
-
- For the price, where else can you get a 32 voice polyphonic 16 bit
- 44khz stereo synth module, that also can play CD audio direct from
- hard disk? I am waiting for the 16 bit A to D board to come out, so
- the ultrasound can be used for hard disk recording. (it comes with an
- 8 bit stereo a-d right now..)
-
- Its a bit early to get into full midi sequencing with the ultrasound
- as you can see, but it so far seems worth the wait.
-
- --
- Gord Wait SMOS Systems Vancouver Design Centre
- uunet!jericho!gord
- gord%jericho@uunet.uu.net
-
-