Live Sound University Article Thu, December 04, 2008
Summary
At the heart of any good audio education is the study of signal flow and wiring: get your inputs and outputs straight, and you can adapt to just about any situation. Moreover, knowing how to trace the routes traveled by MIDI data and audio signals is critical to effective troubleshooting.
So what happens when most of your “gear” is actually software? What good is that stack of freshly soldered MIDI cables when you’re trying to send timing signals from your digital audio workstation (DAW) to your virtual drum machine? What if you want to route the audio output of your software synthesizer to your sequencer so that you can apply a virtual gate to it? In that case, neither a balanced nor an unbalanced cable will do you much good.
What you need are virtual cables: those clever inventions that function just like real hardware cables, except that they’re actually software that connects one program to another. Here’s a closer look at how they work.
VIRTUAL I/O
To get MIDI Timing Clock (or any MIDI message) from your sequencer to your software drum machine, you must use a utility commonly known as a virtual MIDI cable. The cable may appear as a function integrated into both programs, or it may be a separate application that shows up in the list of MIDI ports available to the two programs. Either way, it’s a software connection — an internal pathway — that passes the beat-clock signal between the two programs in a manner similar to the way a physical MIDI cable passes a signal between two hardware devices.
Getting your software synthesizer’s audio output back into your DAW works in like fashion, except you use a virtual audio cable to make the connection. The concept resembles that of an audio bus, except that a bus is ordinarily restricted to making connections within a DAW’s mixer. Like a physical patch cable, a virtual audio cable connects one software application’s audio output with another’s audio input.
Increasingly, virtual audio and MIDI connections are being integrated into host programs. When a soft synth is implemented as a plug-in or a virtual instrument, it appears as a prewired audio insert within your sequencer, and it then shows up as an available MIDI output device on a MIDI track. That’s an ideal arrangement; however, not all software synths are available as plug-ins, and the synth you want may not be available in the plug-in format you need. In either case, you’ll need a virtual cable.
Generally speaking, virtual cables come in two types: interconnection standards and ancillary applications. When two programs support the same interconnection standard, they see each other as I/O options. That’s the next best thing to operating as a plug-in, because it’s extremely convenient. If the “gear” you want to hook up doesn’t work as a plug-in and doesn’t support a common interconnection standard, you must use a separate application to emulate a physical cable. Although that is a bit less convenient, it is nevertheless a potentially powerful and useful tool for your virtual toolkit.
BUS RIDE
Let’s take a closer look at the example I mentioned earlier and see how to lock a software drum machine to a DAW using MIDI Timing Clock. For this example, I’ll use a Macintosh running Digidesign’s Pro Tools LE and Koblo’s Gamma9000. Because I’ll be using Opcode’s Open Music System (OMS) to organize the MIDI setup, I will make the MIDI connections through a virtual pathway that is called the IAC bus.
The IAC (Interapplication Communication) bus is a set of virtual MIDI cables built into OMS and therefore available to any application that supports OMS. (Mark of the Unicorn’s [MOTU’s] FreeMIDI offers similar functionality through its Interapplication MIDI.) It allows as many as four internal MIDI ports, each with the customary 16 MIDI channels.
If you double-click on the IAC bus icon in OMS Setup, you can rename the IAC ports. Take advantage of this feature to name your IAC ports something useful and meaningful. For this example, I’ll use the mundane but informative name “GammaSync.” Now the virtual cable has a label.
In order to get Gamma9000 listening to the IAC bus for MIDI Clock, you must first set its MIDI driver (found in the File menu under Select Drivers) to OMS, and then set its Doc Bus (found in the Options menu under MIDI Setup) to GammaSync. Simply click on the Sync button, and Gamma9000 waits for MIDI Timing Clock.
Sending clock pulses down the IAC bus from Pro Tools LE is as simple as checking “Enable MIDI Beat Clock” and then choosing GammaSync as the desired port. When you start playback in Pro Tools LE, Gamma9000 will be right in step. I will address virtual audio routing next.
Brian Smithers is associate course director of MIDI at Full Sail Real World Education in Winter Park, Florida.
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