[RWP] reaaccess problem - It will not get installed on reaper 32bit, in windows 64bit
Indigo
33indigo at charter.net
Fri Aug 29 12:25:55 EDT 2014
The Behringer BCF2000 is incredibly easy to configure to Reaper.
Just read the info for configuring it to Sonar written by Chris Smart,
and set the mode to the same as for Sonar.
Even without Tim's scripts, the BCF2000 controls 8 Reaper tracks, with
all the faders immediately jumping to whatever levels the tracks have,
then you can shift it to the next 8 tracks, etcetera, up to 32 tracks
controlled by the faders for level.
Same for pan and the other knobs up top.
In other words, you get a bunch of control by default.
No, the controls for jogging down at the bottom right corner don't work,
they just jump to track beginning or end, the standard Reaper audio
jogging with left and right arrows works, the BCF's buttons don't, at
least by default they don't, but you already have Reaper's jogging and
the BCF2000 doesn't interfere with anything you get from ReaAccess.
There may be other BCF2000 buttons that don't do anything in Reaper by
default, but you get a bunch of control with nearly zero effort.
If you want much more control, there are many control scripts on the
Reaper forums for the BCF2000.
Load any of these and prepare to study their manuals, if they exist, to
learn how compulsive/obsessive thoseguys on the forums are at
controlling every last tiny area of Reaper.
Not me, I got other things to do in life besides chasing down the last
Nth degree of control in anything.
The Edirol PCR-300 is also very easy, and has served me for must be ten
years at least.
Roy Shtupler and I both have an Edirol PCR.
That same control surface is now sold by Cakewalk, I believe, and has
pretty much the same panel layout.
The king of all the controllers, for me, is Novation's AutoMap controllers.
I configured it in Reaper's preferences/control surface by myself with
NVDA, which was easy, but about 2 minutes of sighted help was required
to click on the bit map button to scan my hundreds of VST plugs, which
took AutoMap about ten seconds.
I then had two copies of each plug, 1 the original plug and 2 the
AutoMapped version, with AutoMap in its name.
Once scanned, all you need to do is insert the Automapped version and
immediately all its parameters are assigned to the particular Novation
control surface you are using, they all use the same AutoMap software.
Camel Audio's Alchemy, for instance, has 27 pages of parameters assigned
to my little $99 box's 8 knobs and 8 buttons.
There's a transparent window that you can pop up in Reaper, probably
also in sonar, by pressing a dedicated button on the control surface,
and the window is totally accessible, reads the name of the plug, the
last parameter you touched on the control surface, its real world
values, like hertz, milliseconds, whatever, and you can edit them right
there in that transparent window.
I call that easy.
Man, I'm going on 80, still suffering from severe allergies and
migraines, always had an obviously leaky memory, and if I can run these
boxes anybody can!
Indi
On 8/29/2014 10:05 AM, Patrick Perdue wrote:
> I like the idea of control surfaces, but getting them set up so that you do eventually get to benefit from the convenience of having one even a basic one, can really be a jerk sometimes. Thinking specifically of the Korg Nanokontrol 2. Without being able to use it's editor, setting up as either a generic button and knob box for plugins, or a control surface for tracks is ok, but have fun doing both. It would almost be better to have two.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Aug 29, 2014, at 9:49, "Alex H." <linuxx64.bashsh at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Definitely hear you about analog/turn a knob and it does stuff type
>> workflow. Getting really sick and tired of inaccessible
>> software/control panels, and no accessible way to do effective and
>> time-friendly automations means I'm looking into a simple but decent
>> contorl surface. Don't need more than 8 faders, for example.
>> Alex
>>
>>> On 8/29/14, Chris Belle <cb1963 at sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>>> Here's another thing.
>>>
>>> I think the focus rite interfaces are fine, but I don't believe there is
>>> any access to the control pannel other than jaws hsc.
>>>
>>> You'll need to hire someone to fix you up a ahk script or something if
>>> you want to fiddle about in the control pannel.
>>>
>>> Change headphone direct monitoring, anything like that.
>>>
>>> If you get one of the little baby units with only two outs, then those
>>> are so simple they will probably have a mix knob for input and out-put
>>> and that's it, but when you start getting to 4 or more ins and outs,
>>> then here we go again.
>>>
>>> YOu wouldn't believe how many message come across the mag, how do I get
>>> blah blah interface to get line one to go to line 3,
>>> I need to pan this, this only comes out one side, it goes on and on, and
>>> this is simple stuff that's so easily done on a mixer based interface.
>>>
>>> People might save a hundred bucks, but then be hung up
>>> doing something simple.
>>>
>>> But it's all about your time and how much aggrevation you want to put up
>>> with.
>>>
>>> For me, i have 0 tolerance for such things, when I want to work and I
>>> want signals to go where I need them, I want to turn and knob and have
>>> it happen.
>>> and even a small but flexible mixer can do wonders.
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> RWP mailing list
>>> RWP at reaaccess.com
>>> http://reaaccess.com/mailman/listinfo/rwp_reaaccess.com
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