home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: tron@westlink.fipnet.fi (Pasi Kovanen)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Bars and Pipes Professional version 2.0
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.audio
- Date: 25 Feb 1994 21:38:37 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 307
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <2klr4t$nm4@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: tron@westlink.fipnet.fi (Pasi Kovanen)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: audio, music, MIDI, sequencer, commercial
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Bars and Pipes Professional version 2.0 ("BPPro") (18 February 93)
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- Bars and Pipes Professional is one of the Amiga's most advanced MIDI
- sequencing programs. The newest version has added many multimedia
- capabilities.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: The Blue Ribbon Soundworks Ltd.
- Address: 1605 Chantilly Drive
- Suite 200
- Atlanta, Georgia 30324
- USA
-
- Telephone: (404) 315-0212
- Telefax: (404) 315-0213
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- 2295 FIM, approximately $350 (US). The US street price is a bit
- above $200, I think.
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- HARDWARE
-
- At least 1 meg of RAM (2 meg recommended).
-
- For MIDI usage, a synthesizer with MIDI is necessary.
- For multimedia applications, it's not necessary.
-
- Works with accelerated Amigas.
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- None.
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- BPPro is serialized: when installed for the first time, a
- registration number must be typed in. The number is printed on the disk
- label.
-
-
- MACHINE USED FOR TESTING
-
- Amiga 1200:
- 2 MB of Chip RAM
- AGA chipset
- Kickstart 3.0
- Workbench 3.0
- 240 MB Maxtor hard disk
-
- GVP JAWS A1230:
- 68030/40
- 68882/40
- 4 MB of Fast RAM,
-
- A MIDI interface
-
- Korg M1 synthesizer
-
-
- INSTALLATION
-
- Installation is done with Blue Ribbon's installing software.
- I'd prefer the Commodore Installer.
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- I will concentrate on the sequencing capabilities, because I'm not
- so interested in building my own multimedia presentations. BPPro is a
- sequencer with thousands of functions and many original ideas. It's not as
- conventional as Dr. T's Keyboard Controlled Sequencer (KCS) and is not a
- "tracker" program.
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- A couple of years ago, I had a quick look at the original Bars and
- Pipes Pro. It looked fine and powerful, but without the manual it was really
- difficult to use (yes, it was a pirate version, I confess). I used OctaMED
- with my M1 and it was nice to use, though music created with OctaMED sounds
- like... well, music created with OctaMED. Some friends recommended that I
- get Dr. T's KCS. I gave it a chance, but everything had to be done with
- numbers. "I had enough of mathematics in High School" (finally over!) I
- thought and deleted KCS from my hard drive.
-
- A few months ago, I decided to buy BPPro II. It came and I had a
- quick look at it. It looked even more fine and powerful, but without
- reading the manual it was really difficult to use. So I read the manual,
- and the program started opening to me.
-
- Basically, BPPro works just like any other sequencer. One has an
- unlimited amount of tracks to record on. Any track can use any MIDI
- channel. But that's as conventional as BPPro gets BPPro. Every track has
- its own pipeline (I wonder how they invented the program's name :-)) with a
- "valve". The valve controls the musical flow. The pipe can be connected to
- three parts: the MIDI-in part, the note part, and the MIDI-out part. When
- you record music, the notes go through the MIDI-in part and get to the note
- part. When BPPro plays the notes, the go through the MIDI-out part.
- Surprising, eh?
-
- Why all these parts? The most powerful little things in BPPro are
- called Tools. Tools are modules, separate from BPPro, that are used for
- tasks like transposing, quantization, echoing, and even unquantization!
- There are dozens of tools in the program, and I have only tried a few of
- them. If one puts a tool just before the note part of the pipe, every note
- recorded will be processed with that tool. But if one places the tool in
- the MIDI-out part, the notes will be recorded unchanged and then processed
- every time they go to MIDI-out. One can place many tools into every
- pipeline, and thus it's very easy to try different quantizations and
- transpositions.
-
- There can be dozens of windows open, and one can change parameters
- for tools in real-time while the song plays.
-
- Accessories are a bit like tools, but they cannot be placed on the
- pipeline. Accessories are also modules and control BPPro's extensive ARexx
- functions, Standard MIDI File importing and exporting, and system exclusive
- recording, among other things. They are like programs that open on BPPro's
- screen.
-
- Tools and Accessories have fun names and icons. "Toasty" controls
- the Toaster, "SMoose" loads and saves SMUS songs and has a picture of a pink
- moose(!!), "ANIMal" plays animations, "G-LOCKenspiel" controls the GVP G-Lock
- genlock, and so on.
-
- There are many ways to edit the recorded piece of music. When one
- double-clicks on the track, an editing window opens. Here one can select
- classical notation (which can be printed), hybrid (which shows notes as
- lines), piano-roll, guitar tablature (for guitar freaks) or list editing. I
- find hybrid the easiest way for editing the notes. One edits the music with
- a wand, hand, and other editing tools (these are not the Tools explained
- above). With the hand, one grabs notes and drags them to new positions. The
- wand alters lengths. Rubber deletes notes, and Pen creates new ones. Hard
- parts of a song can be recorded by step editing.
-
- Also, pattern editing facilities exist but I haven't had experience
- with them yet. When I looked at them for the first time, the program crashed
- (I got scared, you know).
-
- Editing the tempo is very easy. You draw a tempo line onto the
- tempo map with the mouse. You can easily create linear, sudden, or
- exponential tempo changes. My only complaint is that I would like to have
- the tempo line relative to the selected "main" tempo; i.e., if I changed the
- main tempo from 125 BPM to 120 BPM, the tempo line also should drop by 5 BPM.
-
- Also, mixing is easy. The Mix Maestro window has sliders and knobs
- for every channel in the song, and movements of these gadgets can be
- recorded in real time. The knob usually controls panning (MIDI controller
- number 10) but you can change it to control something else. (Panning
- doesn't work with the Korg M1, by the way.). The slider works like the
- volume slider in a mixing board and usually affects MIDI volume
- (MIDI controller number 7).
-
- Song Construction is a nice window. Here you can break your song
- into named sections (A, B, C, etc.) and put the sections in any order you
- wish.
-
- The multimedia support is extensive with full SMPTE support. It
- also has support for Scala, the Video Toaster, Sunrise AD516 card, and its
- own slide show program. The SMPTE tracks can be set to real-time mode.
- Real-time tracks do not react to tempo changes.
-
- Every track can have its own time signature. This can create really
- exciting results, I think (I haven't tried this yet).
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- Documentation is in a bound manual almost 400 pages long. It is a
- bit boring to read (I didn't expect a best-seller, but...) and it lacks a
- tutorial. This isn't so nice, because the program has many, many functions
- and you don't learn them just by reading. But the easiest way to learn how
- to use this program is simply to use the program.
-
-
- LIKES
-
- Tools are a wonderful invention. I can change my music in almost
- every way I like without destroying the original recording. Non-destructive
- editing rules!
-
- Hybrid editing works fine.
-
- BPPro can record System exclusive dumps long "enough", whereas KCS
- is limited to 16 KB only.
-
- Importing and exporting MIDI files is easy.
-
- BPPro is expandable; for example, SuperJAM! can be integrated.
-
-
- DISLIKES
-
- Bugs :(. (Look below)
-
- The program has very strange windows. They may look "cool" with
- Kickstart 1.3, but with Kickstart 2.0 or better I would like to see
- gadtools.library used and normal Amiga windows. Drop AmigaDOS 1.3 support!
-
- There's no direct, good support for Amiga's 8-bit samples. A tool
- called "SamplePhone" does play samples, but every sample plays only on one
- pitch.
-
- Step recording should have a quick access to note lengths. For
- example, F1 should create a whole note, and F5 a sixteenth note.
-
- I would like to see more extensive pattern support.
-
- Access to some features requires little complicated maneuvers. More
- buttons and keyboard support are wanted.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- I've tried to use KCS but it seemed far too ugly and difficult to
- use.
-
- I'm a beta-tester for OctaMED Professional and have been using that
- program for over two years now. The direct tracker style is good for
- "computer music styles" like techno, not for "living" music. Also it's very
- difficult to export songs from OctaMED to other sequencers. Nowadays I
- mainly use BPPro.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- Lots of bugs. :(
-
- The printing of the notes is quite buggy. Sometimes, notes are
- printed without their stems.
-
- When I save extra-hires notes into an IFF file with the Save command,
- BPPro tends to go into "fireworks mode" (crash) very often. Also normal
- printing sometimes crashes.
-
- The hybrid editor usually works fine, but the notation editor has
- zillions of bugs. The notating resolution does nothing, and sometimes BPPro
- won't even show the notes (staff centering doesn't work).
-
- The punch-in recording should start playing one measure before the
- selected point, and then switch on recording. For about two weeks, it
- always started directly on the punch-in point. Now it works fine, though.
- Very strange.
-
- I had some trouble a while ago, when the program used to crash
- almost every time I started it... and if it did start, it still crashed in a
- few seconds. I re-installed BPPro and tried about everything, but nothing
- helped. Then I realized the problem: I had my Video Backup System on the
- serial port, and it constantly inputs video data to the Amiga. BPPro is the
- first program I've seen to crash when it receives that signal.
-
- And this one is really serious. Two times has BPPro crashed when
- saving the song, thus destroying both the older and newer version. That's
- unacceptable.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- It does exist, but not here in Finland. 60 days of free technical
- support.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- I'm not sure about any warranties, but I think they are not
- essential with software products.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- Despite the long list of dislikes and bugs, BPPro is a good
- sequencer, the best for the Amiga I think. If Blue Ribbon only fixed those
- bugs and added some comfortableness, this would be an almost perfect
- sequencer.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- Every typo Copyright 1994 Clumsy Fingers Ltd.
-
- Unfortunately I do not have USENET access. For any comments or
- upgrade notices, please contact my friend Tapio Ronkainen,
- tron@westlink.fipnet.fi. He'll send your messages to me (I hope...).
-
- - Pasi Kovanen
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Send reviews to: amiga-reviews-submissions@math.uh.edu
- Request information: amiga-reviews-requests@math.uh.edu
- Moderator mail: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu
- Anonymous ftp site: math.uh.edu, in /pub/Amiga/comp.sys.amiga.reviews
-