Hi Jerry --
First, I've gotta say that I'm looking forward to your review! I enjoy reading your comments and analysis. Thanks for taking the time from your writing to send such a thorough reply.
Needless to say, your suggestions are right on and I like the approach which you described for working with SysEx (and other difficult low-level data) in a "humanized" way. Hopefully, Yamaha will adopt this approach (and other techniques) now that they are free of the old UI and its legacy code. You're right -- it will take more work and effort on their part to craft all of the dialogues.
I'm not much of a songwriter myself, but I see the need to try different chord progressions. Again, your observation is spot on. Since Yamaha are pitching the Genos to songwriters and composers (in addition to its traditional customer base), your observation might encourage them to improve the chord track.
Yamaha received a patent (U.S. 9,142,203) on a method that translates a textual chord chart to an accompaniment. A chord chart might look like:
Title: AAAAA
Composer: BBBBB
Key: CMajor
Style name: Pop1
Musical time: 4/4
Tempo: 120
[A]
| C | C F | F G7 | C_G7 C |
| C | C F | F C | F G7 C_ |
| C | C | F C | C G7 |
| C | C | F C | G7 C |
Not that different from chord charts found on the Web.
I mention this because it would be so much easier to enter a lead sheet or experiment with chord progressions if the incoming representation was more compact and musical than the chord track editor in Song Creator.
Perhaps Yamaha envisions the chord chart translator as a tablet-based tool that sends the accompaniment to an arranger workstation? I guess we won't find out until Yamaha finally releases a tool based on the patent. Yamaha's Chord Tracker app can send an accompaniment to an arranger workstation, so the transfer part is definitely do-able.
The discussion got me reminiscing about the QY-70. The QY's chord and pattern track inspired me to check out Yamaha's arranger workstations and that got me into this whole thing!
Thanks, again -- pj
Hi Jerry --
First, I've gotta say that I'm looking forward to your review! I enjoy reading your comments and analysis. Thanks for taking the time from your writing to send such a thorough reply.
Needless to say, your suggestions are right on and I like the approach which you described for working with SysEx (and other difficult low-level data) in a "humanized" way. Hopefully, Yamaha will adopt this approach (and other techniques) now that they are free of the old UI and its legacy code. You're right -- it will take more work and effort on their part to craft all of the dialogues.
I'm not much of a songwriter myself, but I see the need to try different chord progressions. Again, your observation is spot on. Since Yamaha are pitching the Genos to songwriters and composers (in addition to its traditional customer base), your observation might encourage them to improve the chord track.
Yamaha received a patent (U.S. 9,142,203) on a method that translates a textual chord chart to an accompaniment. A chord chart might look like:
Title: AAAAA
Composer: BBBBB
Key: CMajor
Style name: Pop1
Musical time: 4/4
Tempo: 120
[A]
| C | C F | F G7 | C_G7 C |
| C | C F | F C | F G7 C_ |
| C | C | F C | C G7 |
| C | C | F C | G7 C |
Not that different from chord charts found on the Web.
I mention this because it would be so much easier to enter a lead sheet or experiment with chord progressions if the incoming representation was more compact and musical than the chord track editor in Song Creator.
Perhaps Yamaha envisions the chord chart translator as a tablet-based tool that sends the accompaniment to an arranger workstation? I guess we won't find out until Yamaha finally releases a tool based on the patent. Yamaha's Chord Tracker app can send an accompaniment to an arranger workstation, so the transfer part is definitely do-able.
The discussion got me reminiscing about the QY-70. The QY's chord and pattern track inspired me to check out Yamaha's arranger workstations and that got me into this whole thing!
Thanks, again -- pj
Hello PJD,
I know that this is a very old topic but I would like to know if YAMAHA meanwhile have done
something with this:
Yamaha received a patent (U.S. 9,142,203) on a method that translates a textual chord chart
to an accompaniment. A chord chart might look like:
Title: AAAAA
Composer: BBBBB
Key: CMajor
Style name: Pop1
Musical time: 4/4
Tempo: 120
[A]
| C | C F | F G7 | C_G7 C |
| C | C F | F C | F G7 C_ |
| C | C | F C | C G7 |
| C | C | F C | G7 C |
Thank you in advance and again sorry for using this old topic.
Salleke.