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Meeting held Wednesday, February 21st, 2018, 7:30pm, The Guitar Store, 8300 Aurora Ave N., Seattle WA 98103

AES PNW Section Meeting Report
Roland Cloud and Gig Performer
The Continuing Evolution of the Virtual Studio
Hosted by Steve Turnidge
with
Brandon Ryan - Roland
Dr. David Jameson - Gig Performer
Colin Isler - Rane
Turntablist Jamie Simmonds
Scott Morgan - Roland Cloud Engineering
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(L-R): Colin Isler (Rane), DJ Jamie Simmonds, Brandon Ryan (Roland), Steve Turnidge (host), Scott Morgan (Roland).
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Presenters and PNW AES Committee members Jamie Simmonds and Colin Isler demonstrate the new Rane Turntables.
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Thanks to the Guitar Store for providing a great venue amongst the beautiful guitars and amps for the well-attended February meeting.

Audio recordings of the meeting:
96k mp3


Photos by Gary Louie; Audio Recording by Rick Chinn

PNW met February 21, 2018 at the local, independent Guitar Store in Seattle for a look at the virtual studio offerings of the Roland Cloud service, and more on the virtual studio. PNW Chair Dan Mortensen opened the meeting, announced upcoming meetings, and had attendees give their brief self-introductions. About 36 (13 AES members) attended.

The possibly misleading original title of the meeting might have been more accurately called The Continuing Evolution of the Virtual Studio, Including: Roland Cloud, Gig Performer, and Rane turntables. Host, author/mastering engineer et al Steve Turnidge welcomed presenters Brandon Ryan and Scott Morgan of Roland, Colin Isler of Rane and turntablist Jamie Simmonds. David Jameson, author of the Gig Performer software, assisted in preparing the demos and answered questions but did not have a formal presentation.

The popular Steinberg VST (Virtual Studio Technology) ecosystem continues to evolve and the Roland Cloud is part of that. A subscription service (now under $20USD/month), it offers a catalog of virtual instruments. Brandon Ryan, with assistance from Turnidge, demonstrated many of the accurate classic Roland synth sounds available. Gig Performer is a VST host, and originally envisioned as a live performance tool; Turnidge showed how it works as an ITB (In The Box) studio configuration tool. Author David Jameson answered questions from the floor.

Another step in virtualization came next in the form of new Rane DJ turntables - now with no tonearms. However, master turntablist (and PNW Committee member) Jamie Simmonds showed how this is not a problem for DJ-ing, with demos. Colin Isler of Rane (and PNW Committee member) assisted and provided background on developing the system.

After a break, where attendees could ogle the displays of guitars, effects, and vintage and boutique amps at The Seattle Guitar Store, door prizes were awarded:

  • Trendnet Ethernet over powerline set, courtesy Dave Lucavish/Eagle Computers - Winner: Sean Dolstad
  • The Guitar Store Tee-shirts, courtesy The Guitar Store - Winners: Mike Goodreau, Jayney Wallick
  • Roland Cloud demo disc, courtesy Roland - Winner: Charles Oxley
  • Amprobe infrared thermometer, courtesy Rick Rodriguez/Fluke - Winner: Marcell Marias
  • Fluke hat light, courtesy Rick Rodriguez/Fluke - Winner: Jessica Toon
  • AES papers CDR, courtesy René Jaeger - Winner: Rick Rodriguez
Next, Scott Morgan of Roland Cloud Engineering spoke about developing a sampled guitar virtual instrument for Roland Cloud, Tera Guitar. You can even adjust the sound of fingers sliding down the strings. He brought his own acoustic to demonstrate aspects of a real guitar vs. the VST.

A big thanks to The Seattle Guitar Store and Sean Dolstad for hosting the meeting amongst walls of beautiful guitars and rows of amps and pedals.


Reported by Gary Louie, PNW Section Secretary


last modified 08/09/2020 19:38:00, dtl