The New Addition

As I had blogged earlier, my plan of adding a new board to my rig happened literally hours before I left for the gig on Friday: I bought a CME UF7.


click for a larger image, but be warned: it’s big!

As I said, I was after a new controller that gave me a better piano feel, without going all the way to hammer-action. This 76-note, semi-weighted keyboard has a beautiful feel to it, and I’m liking the control surface (9 sliders, 8 knobs, both with buttons that change what they control) more and more. The important thing here was that I literally went from the store to packing it in a van, set it up onstage, and using it live (ok, there *was* a soundcheck)! I know, nuts, right? Well, I survived, and where I was using it for piano parts (triggering an Alesis Nanopiano), it was great (the sound being impacted by the velocity curve of the controller, in case you were wondering how a controller could change the sound of something!).Last night, I finally had the opportunity to plug it into my computer (it has USB) and trigger some softsynths. One of the cool things there was playing organs with the UF7’s sliders in “drawbar” mode: very nice.

One of the unexpected bonuses was the addition of a software editor (Windows, but it runs in Wine) for the board, which, among everything else, allows you to edit the velocity curves, something I didn’t think would be possbile.

Overall, this was a great purchase and addition to my rig, both on-stage and studio. This is going to see a lot of use.

Update Stymied By Lack of Access

Well, I really wanted to post entries last weekend, during the gig, but the place we were at had only spotty cellular signal. Oh, well. We had an amazing weekend: we were happy with the way the music went (a couple of minor glitches, but hey, that’s live music, right?), the speaker was great, a bunch of kids were really impacted by the whole weekend, the location was beautiful, and we had a blast. What more could you want?

Oh, yeah, my new keyboard worked wonderfully. More on that next.

A New Live Rig

This weekend, I’ll have my first live gig with reverential, a project started by my friend Dan. We’re playing a youth retreat at a camp in the Poconos in nothern PA. Over the last few weeks, we’ve been practicing for the gig, and over that time, I’ve been refining my rig. There will probably be a further refinement over the next day (which is a little scary, because we leave tomorrow afternoon!), but more on that in a bit.

Going for minimalism, I purchased an Ultimate Support center-column 2-tier stand on which will be my Korg Karma above a controller. Currently, that controller is my ancient Ensoniq Mirage (the only other board I have that does velocity (shows you the age of my collection!). The MIDI out from the controller goes into my Alesis Nano Piano, and the thru goes into the Karma. When I’m not playing piano from the controller, and change of the MIDI channel will allow me to play sounds on the Karma seperate from the one triggered by the Karma’s keyboard (done with a combi made up of different programs on different channels). At some point, adding the Kawai K1m and Roland U-220 would be nice, but for this one, I’m keeping it simple.

I said the Mirage is currently the controller because in the next day, I hope to be the proud owner of a CME UF7, a 76-key, semi-weighted MIDI controller. I say “hope” because the only way to get one of these apparently is to order it, and I’m not about to buy one without playing it. Thankfully, Sam Ash in PA was able to order one (I did have to put down a deposit) that I’ll be able to try first. Cutting it close to the wire, they should have it in by tomorrow morning, and hopefully by tonight. I’ll post my “review” once I get my hands on it, whether I buy it or not, and if I do, I’ll probably be posting remotely from the gig (assuming network connectivity).

Oh, by the way, I did consider M-Audio, but rejected them for two reasons: one, the semi-weighted board they have doesn’t have much in the way of front-panel controls, and things like changing MIDI channels on stage would have been hard (they’re after the computer market, not the stage musician), and their 88-note hammer action controller had (for me) a really bouncy feel to the keys that I just didn’t like. Too bad, too, because I loved the control surface, and really wanted to like it. Oh, and I didn’t go for fully-weighted/hammer action because I wanted something a little more versatile, and I thought playing synth-like sounds from a hammer action keyboard might be a little strange.

More later.

Missing Amsterdam

Back in April, Michelle and I were in Amsterdam (and other parts of the Netherlands) for 10 days (mostly for a conference Michelle was attending, but I have family there so it was also part vacation). Back in August, I was at the O’Reilly Open Source Conference in Portland, and I had a blast.

I really miss Amsterdam – it was probably the first city I thought I could feel at home living in (not a city person), but on top of that, the Euro version of OSCON just started, and it’s being held in Amsterdam…

Really wish I was there right now…