
Monday through Friday at Project Lodge there was a free crash course in
cycling74 software tools: Max, Jitter and Max for (Ableton) Live. I was able to attend all of Monday and the last 3 hours of Thursday's classes. Pal Gregory and co-presenter and new pal Darwin held forth on the near east side and the lovely weather allowed visits on the bicycle.
Know enough to be dangerous at this point and ahead will be digging into this deep and useful set of strategies to enhance the electro acoustic rig. That's what I have when Gregory and I do our gigs. The basic concept is to play mostly hand held stuff, some of it of my own invention and some of it high tech from, well the early 90s. So no drums, just a table with a bunch of wired up gadgets:
DrumKATMini-MIDI keyboard hack

I made this from an old keyboard that was meant to plug into a PC. Jon G hot wired it to just be a plain old MIDI keyboard. I removed the frame, sawed some off and replaced all the white keys 'cept the 2 on each end.

The little blue pickup in the upper left is set up all industrial-strength and can be attached to stuff easily. It's like a little mic to amplify the little stuff. I also plug it into a trigger input of the KAT, attached to the sawed off piece of color coordinated wrist-rest pad - it's my 'kick drum' trigger. You just tap the little guy with your toe and "whooom!".
Upper right is the remaining example of my the original set of 4 electronic drum pads made from plumbing parts. It still works anyway.
At the bottom is a plastic mouthwash bottle festooned with a piezo pickup glued on to it's mouth - tap tap, whump, bink, etc.
The 'rack' will have my trusty Yamaha MU-80 tone module/effects box, Uptown Flash MIDI controllable mixer, Mackie 12o2 mixer and some yet-to-be-determined MIDI interface for the Powerbook. Losing the old 486 PC laptop (Win95!) and Bome's MIDI translator formerly used to interface Mini-MIDI kbd to the rest of the rig.
Immediate goals: System Exclusive messages translated from incoming KAT notes to change voices, pitch, duration and effects on the fly, enhancing the KAT's multi-note/multi-message generating capabilities in order to play 'rule games' for auto-accompaniment. And nifty things like setting tap tempo (adjusting delay times) on the fly. This last item on the hit list will allow matching tempos set by Gregory's looping and delays in performance, hoo!
