Hey Chuck,
The volume settings in instrument list, studio view, and the mixer
are all linked and all do the same thing. They also override any
settings in the Kontakt Player. I find it easiest to set the volume
in the instrument list, but you can use whichever of these three
methods you prefer.
The problem is (as you'll soon discover), there is no one setting for
JABB instruments that works well in all situations. For some passages
at some dynamic markings, JABB trumpets may need to be set to a
volume twice that of the trombones. For passages at a contrasting
dynamic level, the best settings may be the inverse of that. This is
something Gary and Tom need to fix on their end -- meanwhile, you can
use the Instrument List, Studio View or the Mixer (whichever you
prefer) to select the settings that give the best overall result for
your piece.
Cheers,
- Darcy
-----
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://secretsociety.typepad.com
Brooklyn, NY
On 18 Sep 2006, at 1:18 PM, Chuck Israels wrote:
Hi Darcy, Simon et al,
Just bought a Radeon 9200, ($140) yet to be installed. There is an
issue with accessing the power supply wires that go to the CD/DVD
drive in order to tap into power for Radeon card, and I just
haven't worked up the ambition to burrow around inside the Mac
yet. Maybe later today.
But here's another question for Darcy, who is au courant on matters
of Garritan JABB balance.
There are myriad places to set the volume of instruments: Finale's
instrument list; Finale's Mixer (seems to be another "window" into
what I imagine to be the same setting); the individual instrument
volume setting in the Kontact Player window, and whatever effect
the mod wheel in the Kontact player has after you tweak it when you
do the setup (not much effect, as far as I can see).
So here's the problem: trombone section levels are set to 64 (in
the instrument list and mixer), and the trumpets, in JABB's
balance, are overpowered by the trombones. This does not resemble
normal acoustic conditions with good players, so the question is,
where to make the change. If I go in to the instrument list/mixer
controls, the trumpet volume needs to be nearly doubled to match
the trombones. Is that the right place to make the change, or is
there a better method, like going in to the Kontact Player window?
In any case, this is an problem of the out of the box JABB balance,
and it needs to be addressed by Gary Garritan and Tom Hopkins, so
that it more closely resembles a natural balance without tweaking,
but meanwhile, what is the best way to approach making an
adjustment to this imbalance?
Darcy?
TIA
Chuck
On Sep 18, 2006, at 9:52 AM, Darcy James Argue wrote:
The Radeon 9800 is an AGP card. This would be a good option if
Chuck wanted to replace his main video card (instead of
supplementing it with a PCI card), especially if he can find one
for such a low price. I haven't checked eBay lately, but my
recollection is that Mac-compatible 9800's generally go for much
more than that stateside.
Cheers,
- Darcy
-----
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://secretsociety.typepad.com
Brooklyn, NY
On 18 Sep 2006, at 7:06 AM, Simon Troup wrote:
On 9/14/06, Chuck Israels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm working on a large score and it is time to get a card that will
allow rotation of my 24" monitor into portrait mode.
Hi Chuck
I recently bought two 20 inch TFT rotatable monitors. They were
expensive enough so I bought a second hand Radeon 9800 Pro Mac
Special
Edition G5 Card on eBay! It was about £80 which is what - $140?
It works brilliantly. The control panels are found in System Prefs >
Preference Panes > ATI and you just click whether you want 90
degrees
CW, 90 degrees CCW or 180 degrees for each monitor. It also works
with
either VGA or DVI. Actually it has an ADC and a DVI connector but it
comes with a DVI to VGA connector, and Br Bott sell an ADC to VGA
connector if you need VGA.
Anyway, this probably isn't the cheapest option even secondhand, but
just to say that ATI versavision (rotation software) is brilliant
and
rotation in general is a real eye opener. I'm generally using one
monitor in front of me in landscape and one to the left in portrait.
This means I can have a score open in two views - the detail in
landscape in front of me where I do actual work and zoom about -
and a
complete page overview in portrait mode to the left which updates
live
with the work I'm doing in the other monitor.
Can't say anything about longevity, but for quality I can vouch for
the LG2000C, rotatable, 1600x1200, DVI & VGA, 3 year on site swap
out
warranty. I paid about £350 each, you can get far cheaper if you
don't
need the HiRes. Anyone thinking of going for rotation would do
well to
put them on a shortlist.
--
Simon Troup
Digital Music Art
Chat with other Finale users at finaleirc.com
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Chuck Israels
230 North Garden Terrace
Bellingham, WA 98225-5836
phone (360) 671-3402
fax (360) 676-6055
www.chuckisraels.com
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