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Video, Lets Compose With Quincy, amazing for Experimental Music
Quincy is developed by RoGame software and has been out for a while now, I;m doing this now because the man behind Quincy, Arthur Roolfs has just released another app called ScalePlay, which I demoed last week.
Arthur asked me if i had looked at Quincy and it turned out that I had actually bought it when it was released and never got round to making a video for it.
So to put that right here is a video for Quincy which is remarkably good for experimental music.
Comments
Sounds like Philip Glass falling down the up escalator. Does this let us play using sounds from other synths?
BTW, in Cubasis how do we set the Left and Right markers to remain in place? Mine keep bouncing around.
I use both Quincy and Xynthesizr's "life" mode often. Lock the scale, and let it ride.
@johnfromberkeley I've got Xynthesizr and love it. Someone told me they thought it was easier to get more "musical" results with Quincy than Xynthesizr. Would you agree? Are Quincy & Xynthesizr kind of redundant though? And, can you specify external synths via midi and turn off internal synths in Quincy like you can in Xynthesizr?
And, can you specify external synths via midi and turn off internal synths in Quincy like you can in Xynthesizr?
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Page says it does Midi over WiFi, which I haven't come across, but would seem to be a different beast than internal Synth control.
You can turn off the internal sound and transmit one channel of core midi to another app.
I haven't watched the video yet, but I always found that while Quincy lets you draw things and then makes music, the music seems to be totally unrelated to what I draw. In that sense, it is quite different from Xynthesizer. I could never find I was actually composing something with Quincy.
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Yeah, I'm a fan of things generative, but am not getting this app at present. I think it's the lack of melody.