I'm probably calling it the wrong thing... I can tell that because the word "flourish" isn't Italian...
ANYwho, I'm trying to make a violin/cello "flourish" - a pitch-bend at the very end of the note, normally ascending. Now that I'm thinking about it, a proper flourish should probably increase in volume toward the end, too. I'll save that for later. I should do some googling...
Using the piano-roll graphical bender kind of works - but its resolution is so huge (half a beat?)... Is there a way to increase the resolution of the points in the graphical bender?
Or simply overlapping notes, making the short flourish overlap the end of the note.
Or I could probably use the automation - but I'd have to have to do that every time I need it - plus in order to copy a phrase I'd need to copy the piano-roll AND the automation track... doesn't seem very elegent.
So I'll just ask: how can one put a flourish on a instrument?
Oh - and also, as far as the graphical pitch-bending tool - it doesn't seem to work on just everything. Like Soundfont samples, for instance. What's the critera for whether one can use that tool on an instrument?
ANYwho, I'm trying to make a violin/cello "flourish" - a pitch-bend at the very end of the note, normally ascending. Now that I'm thinking about it, a proper flourish should probably increase in volume toward the end, too. I'll save that for later. I should do some googling...
Using the piano-roll graphical bender kind of works - but its resolution is so huge (half a beat?)... Is there a way to increase the resolution of the points in the graphical bender?
Or simply overlapping notes, making the short flourish overlap the end of the note.
Or I could probably use the automation - but I'd have to have to do that every time I need it - plus in order to copy a phrase I'd need to copy the piano-roll AND the automation track... doesn't seem very elegent.
So I'll just ask: how can one put a flourish on a instrument?
Oh - and also, as far as the graphical pitch-bending tool - it doesn't seem to work on just everything. Like Soundfont samples, for instance. What's the critera for whether one can use that tool on an instrument?