Humanizing 7 years ago Hi all. I just wanted to share something I happened upon while scoring. We all know that we are imperfect. Even the tightest bands can't replicate the perfection of MIDI notes. So, if desired, you an place a 1/32nd or 1/64th grace note before a standard note or chord to replicate this imperfection. It also gives the accompaniment a little "thickness." I've found this to be especially pleasant with percussion parts. Just an FYI. Quote Selected
Re: Humanizing Reply #1 – 7 years ago Quote from: ItmightbeJB – 7 years agoHi all. I just wanted to share something I happened upon while scoring. We all know that we are imperfect. Even the tightest bands can't replicate the perfection of MIDI notes. So, if desired, you an place a 1/32nd or 1/64th grace note before a standard note or chord to replicate this imperfection. It also gives the accompaniment a little "thickness." I've found this to be especially pleasant with percussion parts. Just an FYI."Never put off 'til tomor..... oh hell this can wait." Quote Selected
Re: Humanizing Reply #2 – 6 years ago I used to add small random variations to the tempo. I used the random number generator in a spreadsheet to generate a selection of numbers then used those to vary the tempo. Ideally every bar, but more practically every few bars. at 120 you probably want to vary it to a maximum of +/- 10 beats. I have an electronic metronome with a tempo tap in and I use that to guide me as to how much to vary it depending on the tempo. You want to be sparing with the more extreme values, though.Geoff Quote Selected 1 Likes Liked by: ItmightbeJB