The Remix Top Baker’s Dozen from NAMM 2009
Number of tumbleweeds spotted blowing through the aisles of the 2009 NAMM Show: 0.
Number of dopedy-dope new products for DJs and producers of electronic and hip-hop music: at least the following 13.
While attendance at the annual Anaheim, CA trade show occurring Jan. 15-18 may have been down a bit, attitudes were upbeat, and booths were filled with new innovations for making 2009 another year sacrificed to the art of making music.
This quick snapshot of 13 hits only represents a slice of the newness on offer, and we’ll be following up this week with full, more detailed show reports on the new hardware and software from NAMM 2009.
ABLETON LIVE 8
You didn’t think this German freight train was derailed did you?
Like clockwork, Ableton cranks out a major update of Live per year, and there’s always reason to take notice. Live 8 ($449 download) includes a new groove engine that includes extracting grooves from audio or MIDI and real-time groove quantize; retooled warping abilities, such as warping audio events by adjusting the events on the timeline, a new Complex Warp Mode and slicing audio files to MIDI tracks based on transients; live looping; track grouping; a revamped MIDI editor; crossfades in the Arrangement view; and five new effects: Vocoder, Multiband Dynamics, Overdrive, Limiter and Frequency Shifter.
Live 8 is scheduled for availability this spring, along with Ableton Suite 8 ($699 download), which includes Live 8, a massive sound collection and many virtual instruments, including the new Latin Percussion acoustic drum collection and the Collision mallet instrument. Ableton’s first soft synth, Operator, has also been updated with new filter types, more modulation options and additive wavetable synthesis.
Prices for boxed version will be higher, and upgrade prices will vary.
AKAI APC40 ABLETON CONTROLLER
When Ableton first announced this at their press conference, they should have handed out Depends, because people were peeing themselves over this thing. Perhaps *the* hit of the show for the Remix crowd, the APC40 represents a collaboration between Akai and Ableton to create a dedicated controller for Live 7 and higher. Intended for real-time mixing, remixing and production, the APC40’s 109 buttons, 16 endless encoders with LED rings, nine 45 mm faders and a replaceable crossfader give you complete control of Live’s Session view, effect devices and virtual instruments with little need for a mouse.
The controller’s multi-colored backlit buttons let you know what’s loaded, what’s playing and what’s being recorded. For the $399 retail price, the APC40 comes with a specially designed version of Live Lite, so whether you use that version, Live 7 or the new Live 8, the APC40 automatically works over a USB connection, with no drivers or mapping required.
ARTURIA MINIMOOG V 2.0
Arturia did a great job modeling the Minimoog in its first version of Minimoog V, and Arturia was clear to us that it didn’t want to change the sound of the instrument. So what was there to improve upon? A fresh batch of presets is nice, and recording automation within each preset for up to four parameters opens a ton of possibilities. But that’s just the beginning.
Arturia added a Vocal Filter, which works almost as if to make the Minimoog talk. The new Vocal Filter, as well as Pan, can be used as destinations for an expanded modulation matrix.
Best of all, a new Sound Map lays out the hundreds of preset sounds in a sortable two-dimensional space as a new and effective way for zeroing in on the sound(s) you want. While that’s helpful, the Sound Map’s morphing might blow your mind. By clicking multiple sounds within the map, you can morph between them.
CELEMONY MELODYNE EDITOR
Back at the 2008 Musik Messe in Frankfurt, Germany, Celemony undoubtedly stole the show with it’s DNA feature–Direct Note Access–for Melodyne. DNA lets you access and edit individual chord tones in audio recordings. Those extrapolated chord notes can be edited like other notes within Melodyne, by altering the pitch, position and duration of the note detected, make it louder or quieter, copy/cut/paste and so on.
The first product using DNA was supposed to be Melodyne Plug-in 2 last fall, but since then, Celemony had rebuilt the product around DNA functions to the extent that a new name was in order. Melodyne Editor ($349) is set to come out this spring and will work as a stand-alone app, as well as a plug-in.
EASTWEST/QUANTUM LEAP SILK
It’s easy to get lost in specs, concepts and jargon at NAMM, but fantastic sounds still rise above all the rest. For Quantum Leap Silk - Masters of the Silk Road ($595), producer/composer Nick Phoenix recorded renowned musicians playing dozens of authentic instruments from China, India and Persia to create a brilliantly sounding and ambitious 25 GB collection of ethnic instruments.
Recorded at major studios using vintage Neumann microphones, Neve consoles and Meitner converters, Silk also takes advantage of EastWest’s new Play 64-bit sample engine, which includes scripting, micro-tuning and a convolution reverb.
EDIROL P-10 VISUAL SAMPLER
Edirol has transferred sister company Roland’s moxy for audio samplers into the video realm with this compact box. The P-10 allows you to capture video clips from DVDs, video cameras and other sources and then trigger them in tempo with effects and with the audio optionally intact if you want to play full music videos for example.
You can also capture still images from video clips and play sets of images as slideshows. The P-10 uses SD memory cards up to 16 GB, which would give you 4 hours of video storage in the Motion JPEG format it uses. With 12 pads and 72 pad banks, you have potentially hundreds of video clips at your disposal. A live input lets you capture videos of your surrounding and immediately play them back to the crowd.
KORG MICROKORG XL
Falling into the gap between the original MicroKorg and the Korg R3 synth, the MicroKorg XL ($750) features the acclaimed analog modeling from Korg’s Radias synth engine, a built-in 16-band vocoder (gooseneck mic included) and a simplified editing system using three large dials and a backlit LCD menu. With its 37-note velocity sensitive mini-keyboard and optional battery power, the MicroKorg XL is compact and ready to fit into a cramped studio or live setup.
While small, this full-featured keyboard includes USB and MIDI controller capability, audio inputs for the vocoder, an editable arpeggiator, 17 effects from the Korg Kaoss series, and it excels in a wide variety of sounds from filthy basses to sharp lead synths and lush, evolving pads.
MOTU BPM
Although frequently unsung, MOTU’s virtual instruments carry famously deep functionality to go along with impeccable sound. It’s latest effort, BPM, a beat production tool for urban and electronic music, continues that tradition.
With the intent of letting you make beats almost as fast as you can hear them in your head, and to stop you from relying on someone else’s loops, BPM gives you 15 GB of 24-bit/96 kHz of percussive material, but you can also sample your own sounds or drag-and-drop sound from your desktop to BPM’s pads, which are compatible with any MIDI pad controller on the market.
Just a few of BPM’s seemingly infinite features include drum layering, patterning sequencing, loop slicing, groove quantizing and unlimited effects processing with its included effects. You can create your entire rhythm track in BPM as a stand-alone app, but it’s not meant to be a one-stop-shop only. With universal plug-in compatibility, it features multiple outputs and many export options for you to use your beats in a DAW session or transfer them elsewhere.
MOTU VOLTA
One of the few “from out of nowhere” surprises at NAMM, MOTU introduced Volta, a virtual instrument plug-in that allows users to play and automate modular synthesizers–and other hardware equipped with control voltage (CV) inputs–right from their workstation software.
To pull off that task, which no other software has done before, Volta receives conventional virtual instrument MIDI note, automation and controller data and then converts it to a control voltage signal, which it sends through an audio interface as DC voltage that can drive a standard CV input. It’s important to point out that the audio interface must have DC-coupled outputs;
Volta also has a Calibration button that can automatically tune analog synths by sending voltages and measuring the pitch response. It can even tune self-oscillating filters.
Scheduled to ship in the first quarter of this year as an Audio Units plug-in, Volta does not have a price attached yet. Its capabilities are vast, but the bottom line is that Volta gives you the same or comparable access to sequence, control and automate your modular and other analog synths, Moogerfoogers and other CV gear that you have over your current soft synths.
NATIVE INSTRUMENTS MASCHINE
We’ve all heard a lot about the combining of software functionality with hardware control. However, until now, the combination has usually come from a fairly traditional piece of hardware having a software component to it, or software being controlled by a piece of general-use hardware. Native Instruments wants to change the game with Maschine ($669), an instrument in the tradition of the tried and true “groovebox,” but made from the ground up to combine the tactile control of hardware with the modern immense capabilities of software. And unlike many other music products before it, Maschine’s hardware is made to work with its software 100 percent, and vice versa.
If you’re used to the traditional groovebox and drum machine workflow, you should have no problem diving into Maschine. You get 16 pressure-sensitive drum pads that illuminate to reflect sequenced patterns, eight rotary encoders and plenty of buttons to keep your hand off the computer’s keyboard and mouse. The package comes with several gigabytes of sampled material for you to make your music, and the hardware doubles as a MIDI controller for your DAW and other instruments.
OPEN LABS MIKO LXD
Open Labs has been going as crazy as its hip-hop endorsers over the last year. At NAMM, it unveiled updated hardware specs and a much-improved software OS for it’s all-encompassing, computer-in-a-keyboard workstations. Among a full line of introductions, the Miko LXD stood out for the Remix crowd.
The 37-key workstation comes with a full software bundle including 60+ virtual instruments, including FXpansion Guru and the Livid Instruments Cell VJ software, all running over Windows XP Home. And you can load your own PC-compatible DAW, DJ and other software into the Miko. In addition Open Labs, has developed Riff, its new virtual instrument host software that makes switching between instruments seemless, and lets you create real-time virtual controls that can be mapped to effects or other parameters.
Miko LXD includes the touch-sensitive computer display and three built-in control modules, two of which are new. The new Bump MP module gives you Akai MPC-style controls such as note repeat, as well as transport controls, hold, pad tune and more. As an original innovation, Open Labs has included a 17th pad called Last Pad. This pad basically plays whatever the sound is of the last pad you hit, letting you perform fast rolls more comfortable on two pads instead of one.
Also new, the Mix/Edit controller gives you controller over as many as 128 channels of audio from within one set of 8 encoders, 8 lighted buttons and 8 faders. Miko LXD begins as $4,599 and is available to order now.
SONIVOX PLAYA
In a coup for cash-strapped cats who want to get into music now, Sonivox Playa supplies the basic tools for urban music production in one stand-alone app or plug-in for $149. That price includes 400 Sonivox instruments (for reference, Sonivox created the instrument sounds for Ableton Live 7), including basses, brums, synths, ethnic sounds, guitars, strings, brass and more. There are also effects, EQ and 50 construction kit-style layouts for the 16 programmable and assignable virtual pads. With MIDI learn, Playa is compatible with any MIDI controller.
WALLANDER BRASS
A lot of companies were trying to show off either their modeled brass or their sample-based brass collections at NAMM, but none that we heard were as impressive as Wallander Instruments Brass 1 ($599). Wallander’s acoustic behavioral modeling does a remarkable job of reproducing the nuances of notoriously difficult to replicate brass instruments. Brass 1 includes models of French Horns, Trumpets Trombones and Tubas and claims to be CPU friendly enough to produce full orchestra-worthy arrangements on a laptop. With modeling, you also don’t have to make room for gigabytes of audio material.









January 21st, 2009 at 4:11 pm
… and one more that I forgot.
This one really does deserve to be on the hits of the show list, and it’s particularly exciting for laptop musicians and producers.
Universal Audio debuted the UAD-2 Solo/Laptop, an ExpressCard version of its recently introduced UAD-2 Solo DSP plug-in host card for computer PCIe slots. The UAD-2 Solo/Laptop features all the DSP power of the UAD-2 Solo at the same price–$499 MAP–and it includes UA plug-ins such as the 1176SE compresser/limiter, Pultec EQP-1A EQ, RealVerb Pro Room Modeler and the CS-1 channel strip.
Not only is the UAD-2 Solo Laptop 2.5x more powerful than UA’s previous ExpressCard solution, the UAD Xpander, but the UAD-2 Solo/Laptop is also much smaller. While the UAD Xpander was the size of an external hard drive and required an AC power connection, the UAD-2 Solo Laptop is not much bigger than a USB dongle and requires no power adapter, giving mobile producers extreme portability and convenience. Check out http://www.uaudio.com/press/releases/index.html.
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