Your review is the best one I have heard thus far! After writing I continued to listen- Wowza! I could have a blast on this thing. I have been playing clarinet for about 50 yrs. I retired from teaching and playing... I can feel the burning to get back into playing. After all, it was the best thing I liked about music.
So how does it work with dynamics?when you change the loudness within the same tone, like what you can also do on a cello. Can you select cello and then it plays continuous dynamic changes?
Good review, i just got my ClariMate and I'm pleased with it. I wanted it to be able to practice without being heard while people are working from home. It's great for that use. I've got 35 years of playing experience, I don't need to worry about the basics, I'm working on pieces I need to know for performances and it's perfect for that. I would absolutely not recommend it for anyone not at an advanced level because you don't need a good embouchure or to worry about tuning notes as you play. A beginner could develop some really bad habits with it. I'm still working on training some notes as well, the pinkie key notes seem to give the most trouble. That noise you hear is a drone sounding inside the barrel. You can hear the tone change as you make different fingerings. It's how the device works, it makes the sound and listens for it to change as you open and close the tone holes. It's really quite ingenious.
This technology wouldn't work for brass instruments. It would only be able to tell the change in the length of the tube but not which harmonic you're playing.
@@AdamG1if it were a 2-stage system that first detects the fundamental being buzzed with DSP, and then a slide sensor, that seems plausible? newer DSP pitch detection tech still surprises me when i’d thought it was as good as it’s ever be a long time ago, and having only one source “instrument” in the mouthpiece would allow designers to focus the internal filtering and other processing to work best with it. that R&D would would also enable a big leap from how EVI/EWI loosely approximate the valved brass experience.
00:00 Unboxing & Components
01:03 Installing Clarimate
02:25 Clarimate App review
04:06 MIDI work with Clarimate
06:20 MIDIMATE App
08:13 Advantages
08:59 Playing CASIOPEA solo with Clarimate
09:23 Disadvantages
09:59 overall review
Your review is the best one I have heard thus far! After writing I continued to listen- Wowza! I could have a blast on this thing. I have been playing clarinet for about 50 yrs. I retired from teaching and playing... I can feel the burning to get back into playing. After all, it was the best thing I liked about music.
@@lynniespringer1705 I’m really glad about my video affected your musical inspiration again..! Hope you enjoy clarinet and music more😽😽
Super cool, had no idea this kind of thing existed
Thanks! It's quite nice🙀😸
I was just looking at this!
Can you slide with it? (Portamento, glissando) Or do multi-phonics?
not yet 😢 I want that functions too..
Whats the static/rumble sound that continues to happen during the whole recording?
When the device is turned on, it makes a rumble sound. you can make the sound quieter, but can’t mute it completely.
@@jazz.laboratory So, then it's not really good for recording, because of the buzz?
@@SeanOsborn if you use midi record function in daw software , there’s no buzz noise.
So how does it work with dynamics?when you change the loudness within the same tone, like what you can also do on a cello. Can you select cello and then it plays continuous dynamic changes?
sure, the sensor detects your wind strength and it applies pn any other virtual instruments.
Wow good!! 이것은 좋은 정보이다 나에게 :)
하고싶다 구매 빠른 시일 내에!
당신과 물 견 교환을 희망하는. dm주세요
Can we arrange lower lip squuze and blowing presure
sure you can control your settings
Looks like this will have many possibilities in the future. It’s a bit raw for now!
@@jasonkolman7820 Im really looking forward to it🙀
Good review, i just got my ClariMate and I'm pleased with it. I wanted it to be able to practice without being heard while people are working from home. It's great for that use. I've got 35 years of playing experience, I don't need to worry about the basics, I'm working on pieces I need to know for performances and it's perfect for that. I would absolutely not recommend it for anyone not at an advanced level because you don't need a good embouchure or to worry about tuning notes as you play. A beginner could develop some really bad habits with it.
I'm still working on training some notes as well, the pinkie key notes seem to give the most trouble.
That noise you hear is a drone sounding inside the barrel. You can hear the tone change as you make different fingerings. It's how the device works, it makes the sound and listens for it to change as you open and close the tone holes. It's really quite ingenious.
I agree with you. It must be a brilliant device, but I think more than a skilled person like you can show the true value of this device!
Bro just installed that shit raw! No lube. I am shooketh. 😂
I wish this existed for trombone
I never imagined it for brass, but it will be amazing when it's developed.
This technology wouldn't work for brass instruments. It would only be able to tell the change in the length of the tube but not which harmonic you're playing.
@@AdamG1if it were a 2-stage system that first detects the fundamental being buzzed with DSP, and then a slide sensor, that seems plausible? newer DSP pitch detection tech still surprises me when i’d thought it was as good as it’s ever be a long time ago, and having only one source “instrument” in the mouthpiece would allow designers to focus the internal filtering and other processing to work best with it. that R&D would would also enable a big leap from how EVI/EWI loosely approximate the valved brass experience.
@sweeterthananything yeah, that's true, I was only thinking of it as it was designed for a reed instrument. I hadn't considered that
Asmr good
@@ddudaming Ah..SNU Michin Ryun..
@@jazz.laboratory I love karts
@@jazz.laboratory KARTS NO.1
@@ddudaming only fact