This video is a time saver! Ive been using the filter and bringing the velocity down manually 😂 Didnt know you could apply math operations to the velocity
There was a feature I liked in the Sonar XL MIDI editor that allowed drawing of the velocities of the notes with a pencil tool. Really good when working with MIDI loops.
Thanks Kenny, I have to try 'midi note explode based on pitch'. Still you get away with a lot just selectively grabbing notes with the marquee tool. Depending on the keyboard (how hinky it is), velocity sensitivity is pretty course, midi hasn't really changed. The quietest hit on my keyboard is nearly always the same velocity.....
The 'midi velocity control' plugin is worth checking too, if you just want to conform the extreme velocities to an upper and/or lower limit, and leave the intermediate velocities unchanged.
Superb, Kenny! MIDI editing is where it's at! I wonder if there are more practical ways in Reaer to edit chords, especially if they are strummed, as these seem impossible to quantize to swing without losing the strummed effect... hope this makes sense. Anyway, congratulations again for another killer tip!
*Note To Self* When you think that you don't need to watch one of Kenny's videos - because you "already know how to do that"....watch it anyway - because he knows more than you - and you will always learn something.
I really wish Reaper would do like Cubase and S1 and only show velocities for a selected note lane. But this works well enough, thanks! BTW, on acoustic drum editing, I wrote a script to still allow moving notes through different note lanes with key commands while in custom note order view mode. Check it out in the forums, if you're interested :)
Double-click your selection to expand the MIDI editor. Click on a note in the lane you want to edit - it will highlight that note - Right click in the editor - choose 'Select All Notes With Same Pitch'. You'll see all of the notes of that pitch on the grid highlighted - as well as the sliders at the bottom. As you move the sliders, you will see all of the notes adjusting together. When you are finished adjusting all of them together, you can click on a single note and it will de-activate the 'All Notes' option. I hope that makes sense.
@@DrProgNerd if I understood you correctly that's not exactly what I meant. But egardless, my point was that this is quite an involved process that the mentioned DAWs "just do". Check out a drum editing with drum maps on cubase/s1 video to see what I meant. MIDI acoustic drums is a big part of what I do, having come from 10+ years of Cubase (and a little S1) before being converted to Reaper makes me really miss that feature.... But next all the other ways Reaper improved my workflow and allows the user to expand it, I'm never going back.
I your previous video, you were using the MIDI keyboard. But, this is clearly a physical drum set. I assume that it is a MIDI drum set? Can't hear the difference.
Just showing how the filter works is pure gold in this video. Thank you so much Kenny (once again)!
As a novice I was bogged down with Logic and Protools. Thank God for Kenny and Reaper.
This video is a time saver! Ive been using the filter and bringing the velocity down manually 😂
Didnt know you could apply math operations to the velocity
Thanks, Kenny! Much easier than individually adjusting the velocity of each drum-hit, and probably more effective!
There was a feature I liked in the Sonar XL MIDI editor that allowed drawing of the velocities of the notes with a pencil tool. Really good when working with MIDI loops.
Love these lessons! As an ex-berkleeite I miss the days of living and breathing this stuff.
Thank You, Kenny ... this can be a great game changer for drum arranging workflows. 🐬🥁🖇
The drum programming looks very impressive, meaning the ghost notes?
The midi was most likely captured with a drummer playing an e-kit.
Thanks Kenny, I have to try 'midi note explode based on pitch'. Still you get away with a lot just selectively grabbing notes with the marquee tool. Depending on the keyboard (how hinky it is), velocity sensitivity is pretty course, midi hasn't really changed.
The quietest hit on my keyboard is nearly always the same velocity.....
The 'midi velocity control' plugin is worth checking too, if you just want to conform the extreme velocities to an upper and/or lower limit, and leave the intermediate velocities unchanged.
Great work, Kenny! Is this ssd5?
Thank you Kenny!!!!
Awesome! Thank you!!
Thank you so much!
Is there anything Kenny can't do with Reaper? I wish had known this was possible before. Thanks for posting! 🤘
Superb, Kenny! MIDI editing is where it's at! I wonder if there are more practical ways in Reaer to edit chords, especially if they are strummed, as these seem impossible to quantize to swing without losing the strummed effect... hope this makes sense. Anyway, congratulations again for another killer tip!
Nice one Kenny!
*Note To Self* When you think that you don't need to watch one of Kenny's videos - because you "already know how to do that"....watch it anyway - because he knows more than you - and you will always learn something.
I really wish Reaper would do like Cubase and S1 and only show velocities for a selected note lane. But this works well enough, thanks!
BTW, on acoustic drum editing, I wrote a script to still allow moving notes through different note lanes with key commands while in custom note order view mode. Check it out in the forums, if you're interested :)
Double-click your selection to expand the MIDI editor. Click on a note in the lane you want to edit - it will highlight that note - Right click in the editor - choose 'Select All Notes With Same Pitch'. You'll see all of the notes of that pitch on the grid highlighted - as well as the sliders at the bottom. As you move the sliders, you will see all of the notes adjusting together. When you are finished adjusting all of them together, you can click on a single note and it will de-activate the 'All Notes' option. I hope that makes sense.
@@DrProgNerd if I understood you correctly that's not exactly what I meant. But egardless, my point was that this is quite an involved process that the mentioned DAWs "just do". Check out a drum editing with drum maps on cubase/s1 video to see what I meant. MIDI acoustic drums is a big part of what I do, having come from 10+ years of Cubase (and a little S1) before being converted to Reaper makes me really miss that feature.... But next all the other ways Reaper improved my workflow and allows the user to expand it, I'm never going back.
plss do toturial on making drum bus
I your previous video, you were using the MIDI keyboard. But, this is clearly a physical drum set. I assume that it is a MIDI drum set? Can't hear the difference.
This is all MIDI.
@@REAPERMania Luvin Reaper, thanks to your great tutorials.
Thanks, Keeny!