i normally play the melody/rhythm on the keyboard first and when i have it “in my head”, i try to program it “dry” into rns, meaning not live.
but sometimes the patters can get quite confusing and i don’t know exactly where to rhythmically place a note, then i usually record one or two notes live to reduce this confusion.
hm, but actually i did that most of the time for the same reasons as you: i don’t want to have to reedit my “live” recorded stuff. and until recently my latency made “live recording” of pattern data rather frustrating. in linux that’s actually way better now, dunno. perhaps i’ll switch to recording more things live in the future.
manually. i’ve been using trackers long enough to be able to see where the notes should go, so it’s just easier than buying and learning to play a keyboard to a decent standard.
90% live, midikeys&padkontrol
5% data
5% accidents
I sure could use some kind of quantize, or piano lessons, I hit the right keys, but never at the right spot, and playing 2 hands leaves a lot of notes to reedit . Sometimes I make some fast melody’s in cubase or live and then load them as midi but mostly I am too lazy for that.
I would like to be able to use a midi-keyboard but it doesn’t work that well in Renoise.
I’m going to dig up one of the bundled cubase sequencer and import the MIDI file into renoise.
One thing that is rather nice with a keyboard is that you also get the “personal touch” since each key don’t get the same velocitity etc. in one go.
I enter all data in manually. though I have a (very old) midi-keyboard, I’m not a keyboard player and I find it much easier to just program in the notes.
Mostly plain tracking.
Occasionally playing chords on my nylon.
And it’s a long time since I touched the keys. I’m not very good at it anyways.
I need a PC-keyboard with velocity sense and aftertouch.
…for music you thought? No, I need it to humanize the size of the letters and spaces while I’m writing texts.