Ah, I love revenant threads. What was great about P5 was the simplicity of the thing and how tuned it was for doing loop-based music. It is harder to do the same things in SONAR, tho not impossible. But I realize the impossibility of integrating the code into modern SONAR. It ain't going to happen.
But what about the Scratchpad idea - I realize it is OS but it is exactly that kinda function SONAR needs and would open up the live (pun intended) functionality. A separate synth or function where you can drag and drop and open clips and acid file s and waves on an expandable (both timeline and vertical) matrix where those clips etc. are represented by pads (or blobs, whatever). You can use the matrix this way but it is a lot harder than I would like, and the matrix boxes aren't really expandable in size w/o resizing the whole matrix (backwards in my opinion - the boxes should themselves should be expandable and the rest of the matrix swells to meet that size).
I need to post the template I have for it, where the matrix runs along the bottom of the timeline and is useable and (available) yet you can still see the timeline itself to kinda keep track where you are in the linear song. Most of my attempts have played lead guitar running through it and singing rather than being simply loops and repeats. So any tempo and key changes in the timeline work on the loops I make from the matrix, but it is a pain to go back and change the key of the original files and then integrate that new clip back into the matrix (so much so I haven't done it, which is why being able to edit the audio [and midi!] within the box would not just be cool but essential). which means I now have to perform live shows w/o any keys changes.
I think something like that, well implemented of course, would change the way users think about using sonar. I know more than a few guitarists etc. that would love to singer/songwrite their stuff live but don't have the chops to be a one man band at one time and have to much integrity to like to play to backing tracks. Give them something to touch and feel on the computer and sing and play once the rhythm is established. Something as simple as P5, but more touchy like Scratchpad they could step through w/ a pedal or their nose or whatever.
Love to see what you could come up w/ that idea, Noel et al.
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