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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

  • edited August 2016

    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.

  • edited August 2016

    @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?

  • @skiphunt said:

    And, can you specify external synths via midi and turn off internal synths in Quincy like you can in Xynthesizr?
    >

    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.

  • @Nkersov said:

    @skiphunt said:

    And, can you specify external synths via midi and turn off internal synths in Quincy like you can in Xynthesizr?
    >

    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.

  • @nick said:
    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.

    >

    Yeah, I'm a fan of things generative, but am not getting this app at present. I think it's the lack of melody.

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