This took me years to find. Many years ago I saw a demonstration, which involved an Atari ST with Cubase, a Yamaha DX7 and a drum computer.
Those were the days were it would cost you a fortune, to do what we now can do with LMMS.
The guy made a basic drum rythym and we complained it sounded so mechanical.
He then went in Cubase changed something, and it suddenly sounded like a live drummer.
For years I have been wondering what he did, but I got an reply about this on the Linux musicians forum. Groove quantization.
https://craiganderton.org/what-is-groov ... with-midi/
I need to do some testing. We should be able to this manual in LMMS.
Change the position and velocity of some of the (midi) notes. We probably need the 1/192 grid for this.
Part of this puzzle is that a real drummer, when going 1,2,3,4 hits a bit harder on the 1 count.
So velocity on the first note up.
Those were the days were it would cost you a fortune, to do what we now can do with LMMS.
The guy made a basic drum rythym and we complained it sounded so mechanical.
He then went in Cubase changed something, and it suddenly sounded like a live drummer.
For years I have been wondering what he did, but I got an reply about this on the Linux musicians forum. Groove quantization.
https://craiganderton.org/what-is-groov ... with-midi/
I need to do some testing. We should be able to this manual in LMMS.
Change the position and velocity of some of the (midi) notes. We probably need the 1/192 grid for this.
Part of this puzzle is that a real drummer, when going 1,2,3,4 hits a bit harder on the 1 count.
So velocity on the first note up.