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Post by joachim on Jul 4, 2019 13:43:32 GMT -6
I've been working on Makin' Changes for a while, and had a go at recording it tonight. My video editing software (Sony Vegas Movie Studie) cannot import the video files recorded by my new webcam, so I could only record the solo part via the webcam microphone.
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Post by Phil on Jul 4, 2019 18:39:39 GMT -6
Nice playing. Well executed. I had a hard time with this study. It's one of my favorites in MBYCU. It's just beautiful, especially the part that starts around :29 seconds.
I'd love to hear a redo of this when you get your hardware situation sorted.
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Post by cunningr on Jul 5, 2019 3:16:18 GMT -6
Nice playing! I see a Princeton amp i do believe, nice amp I was looking at those before but decided it was too much amp for my needs. Kinda regret not getting it though. I am with full ready for the full version.
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Post by jack1982 on Jul 5, 2019 5:19:15 GMT -6
I loved that Joachm! Definitely one of my favorite studies from MBYCU, the way it follows the chord changes around and just has such a nice laid back feel to it. Makes me want to learn it again That sucks about Sony Vegas not being able to import the stuff from your webcam. You could look around the web for some sites that convert one type of file to another, I know I've used some to convert YouTube videos to audio files so I could swipe some backing tracks to play along with lol, I seem to remember them being able to convert quite a few other file types as well.
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Post by bluesbruce on Jul 5, 2019 7:40:24 GMT -6
Joachim, your playing sounds impeccable. That is a really nice study. It's always frustrating when the technical stuff gets in the way of the musical stuff. There's some planned obsolescence - you get a new webcam, then you need new software to work with it, then probably a new computer to be able to run the new software... it's a perfect waste of good money that could be better spent on another guitar, or more educational books and videos!
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Post by joachim on Jul 5, 2019 10:03:37 GMT -6
Thanks everyone.
Rich, it's the Princeton Custom 68 version. It is a little expensive, but I really love it.
It's annoying with the webcame - it used to work perfectly, but after a Windows Update it doesn't. And it's been like that for 3-4 months. I brought a small Intel NUC with Linux installed home from work for testing, and everything seems to work. Reaper, Webcam recording, Video editing with Blender - all without installing special drivers or jumping through hoops, so I ordered an NUC computer myself and will drop Windows entirely.
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Post by grampalerxst on Jul 14, 2019 8:38:52 GMT -6
Thanks everyone. Rich, it's the Princeton Custom 68 version. It is a little expensive, but I really love it. It's annoying with the webcame - it used to work perfectly, but after a Windows Update it doesn't. And it's been like that for 3-4 months. I brought a small Intel NUC with Linux installed home from work for testing, and everything seems to work. Reaper, Webcam recording, Video editing with Blender - all without installing special drivers or jumping through hoops, so I ordered an NUC computer myself and will drop Windows entirely. Did the webcam come with a driver? During a Windows update over the last year it blew away an OEM driver I had for a Line6 device and substituted a generic asio driver. Reinstalling the line 6 driver restored everything to working order.
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Post by joachim on Jul 21, 2019 3:09:49 GMT -6
Thanks everyone. Rich, it's the Princeton Custom 68 version. It is a little expensive, but I really love it. It's annoying with the webcame - it used to work perfectly, but after a Windows Update it doesn't. And it's been like that for 3-4 months. I brought a small Intel NUC with Linux installed home from work for testing, and everything seems to work. Reaper, Webcam recording, Video editing with Blender - all without installing special drivers or jumping through hoops, so I ordered an NUC computer myself and will drop Windows entirely. Did the webcam come with a driver? During a Windows update over the last year it blew away an OEM driver I had for a Line6 device and substituted a generic asio driver. Reinstalling the line 6 driver restored everything to working order. Grampa, yes, there's a bunch of Logitech stuff proprietary stuff install on Windows. But now I took the leap and installed Linux on a new computer. It's not something I would recommend for everyone, but I haven't run into any show-stoppers yet. There is a version of Ubuntu called Ubuntu Studio which is tailored towards audio productions with DAWs, which helps a lot. Reaper runs right of the box on Linux, and there's even a pretty cool amp simulator called Guitarix, which also works right of the box. And Blender can handle simple video editing task, so you basically have the tool chain for free. I still prefer Reaper over the free alternatives, though.
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