On 26.08.2014 19:39, Devin Venable wrote:
My dream feature?  Click on segment, select "convert to sample" and a
new midi track appears linked to a plugin sampler, ready to play.

I could have used something like that a few times.

Being an architecture astronaut by hobby, I've been wondering about the differences and commonalities between (audio-)sequencers and samplers. In both cases you have an abstraction on top of actual audio-files and playback start/stop. But playback is parameterized differently. The sequencer has a timeline position and transport state, while the sampler takes notes (and potentially a bunch of control events).

Lets think of a track in a sequencer to actually be a mapping of a playlist to a playback graph. The playlist can be reduced to a sequence of events. The playback graph consists of at least a playback engine and may contain an effect chain.

In typical sequencer use, for pure audio tracks, a playlist will contain regions that map to audio-files. That part of it can be reduced to a sequence of audio-sample-values, as main input to the playback engine. There may be other events/automation, all being inputs to the playback graph. The general idea is that you always deal with sequences of events as inputs to a playback graph.

Now all of that is coupled to a single, global playback control, consisting of transport state and timeline position. What if you could choose to decouple tracks from global control and make them take note-events for playback control instead? If the playback engine can variate playback speed in relation to note-value, you have a basic sampler. If the playback engine also offers realtime pitch-shifting/time-stretching and formant control, you have wonderland.

Note that you would not be limited to control a decoupled track's position and state by notes. There could also be direct control with start/stop/speed (including negative) and locate/go-to events. Tracks that play tracks ... Mmwuhahahaha!


--
Thorsten Wilms

thorwil's design for free software:
http://thorwil.wordpress.com/
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