WOW, I just found a way to have Scaler feeding chords and riffs in AAS Strum-GS 2 (in the Guitar mode) at the same time, producing interesting sounds… only sometimes clearly
Al that requires just the MIDI Polysher between, then fumbling with the octave changer
The trick is moving octaves so that most notes fall in the riff area (far left or far right) and only a few notes fall in the middle area where they trigger chords, and when one of the notes falls over the Strum-GS Stop key (or other rogue keys) you have simply to hidden them with MIDI Polysher
This is BTW the reason why I prefer using MIDI Polysher to manage octaves, instead of the Ableton Live pitch tools
@ClaudioPorcellana have you considered doing some “from zero to hero” youtube tutorials with your experiments/reserach? I’m super interested but with screenshots it seems a bit complicated
If you find a way to double the daily available time, I’ll do it for sure
But the “from zero to hero” concept is tempting… notably the second part LOL
Now, I am equipped to do that as I have a good webcam and video software; I only have to practice with subtitles etc
The problem is finding the time to do the video-editing, because I often find tricks plucking and fiddling in a Trial and error fashion, so the video must be cut and the video-takes glued together
I do not think anybody remotely sane ever said “the content is pure gold but since it’s unedited I will not watch it” Come on - deep breath, “geronimo!” and publish unedited
@lelek yesterday I fought 2 hours against a couple of pieces of software, just to obtain a low-quality video without audio
Sorry but gaining the needed expertise requires much time that I don’t have
Consider that I work hard, and my scarce spare-time must be shared between nature photography, music composition to relax my mind, and cartoon drawings