I found this short quote from a book from 2014 by Chris Norhtdurfter - which has been recommended
I empathise with the comment re figuring out Midi - as I've only just started getting it to work, both with DAWS, notation software and occasionally real hardware - keyboards.
In my investigations I have also come across other tools, such as sequencers and synthesisers. Re synthesisers I've gradually figured out that there have been a few common analogue varieties, and then more recently digital ones, and now many synthesisers are provided as software plug-ins for DAWs. The digital ones could be more or less exact replicas of previous hardware devices, while the analogue ones might be a reasonable approximation, as it seems that the techniques and mathematics behind these are now understood much better than they were 40 years ago.
In those 40 years, pop and rock music mostly passed me by, and I'm not particularly looking to delve into those genres of music in depth, but clearly some musicians were playing with synthesisers, doing live gigs, and making records. Were they just knob twiddlers, or did some of them know what they were doing?
I'm sure that many of them did, though some might not have done ...]
I can understand quite easily a keyboard - similar to a piano - even if it does generate synthesised electronic sounds, but what am I supposed to do with interfaces like this, or this, or this? I really don't know.
Just as the HitIt book might bring me up to date with drum beats, is there anything similar for the various forms of synthesisers, which I have missed out on over the last half century? Any other potentially useful sources?
Now that we know what all the different parts of a drum kit are called ... to achieve this we use the latest cutting-edge technology from 1982, the so-called Musical Instrument Digital Interface protocol, or MIDI for short.
In my investigations I have also come across other tools, such as sequencers and synthesisers. Re synthesisers I've gradually figured out that there have been a few common analogue varieties, and then more recently digital ones, and now many synthesisers are provided as software plug-ins for DAWs. The digital ones could be more or less exact replicas of previous hardware devices, while the analogue ones might be a reasonable approximation, as it seems that the techniques and mathematics behind these are now understood much better than they were 40 years ago.
In those 40 years, pop and rock music mostly passed me by, and I'm not particularly looking to delve into those genres of music in depth, but clearly some musicians were playing with synthesisers, doing live gigs, and making records. Were they just knob twiddlers, or did some of them know what they were doing?
I'm sure that many of them did, though some might not have done ...]
I can understand quite easily a keyboard - similar to a piano - even if it does generate synthesised electronic sounds, but what am I supposed to do with interfaces like this, or this, or this? I really don't know.
Just as the HitIt book might bring me up to date with drum beats, is there anything similar for the various forms of synthesisers, which I have missed out on over the last half century? Any other potentially useful sources?
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