Hi there,
For many years I have been using my Trinity on stage. I'm going to buy the Triton Extreme this week to replace it. Now, I was wondering if I could somehow copy my presets from the Trinity (prog, combi, fx) to the Triton. That would at least get me going for a while until I made some new presets with the triton.
greatings,
Jeroen
moving sounds from Trinity to Triton Extreme
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Triton can't read Trinity data.
You wont be able to copy your presets, but you can recreate your sounds from Trinity in Triton with not so much time and effort. Parameters are similar and there is a good chance you'll find similar, if not the same, preset multisamples in both workstations. You'll start from scratch, but can be done.
Regarding sounds based on preset Trinity multisamples not found in Triton, you can sample those. With Extreme sample capacity maxed to 96 MB this shouldn't be the problem.
You wont be able to copy your presets, but you can recreate your sounds from Trinity in Triton with not so much time and effort. Parameters are similar and there is a good chance you'll find similar, if not the same, preset multisamples in both workstations. You'll start from scratch, but can be done.
Regarding sounds based on preset Trinity multisamples not found in Triton, you can sample those. With Extreme sample capacity maxed to 96 MB this shouldn't be the problem.
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- Joined: Sun May 18, 2008 8:43 am
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Well, that's the best way to change workstations, to continue playing old one until you customize the new one.
But, I suggest you keep your Trinity. There is something about Trinity sound... it has some warmth you may find impossible to recreate on Triton Extreme. Trinity isn't better than Triton in any aspect, don't get me wrong, but has specific sound flavor, different (not necessarily better) than Triton, that you might miss if you sell it.
You could say I'm subjective on this matter, but there was one thread where several musicians shared this feeling about Trinity.
But, I suggest you keep your Trinity. There is something about Trinity sound... it has some warmth you may find impossible to recreate on Triton Extreme. Trinity isn't better than Triton in any aspect, don't get me wrong, but has specific sound flavor, different (not necessarily better) than Triton, that you might miss if you sell it.
You could say I'm subjective on this matter, but there was one thread where several musicians shared this feeling about Trinity.
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- vectorsynth
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- Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2008 12:20 am
- Location: Germany
Maybe you want to give this small tool a try:
http://alchemist.sourceforge.net
I have not tried it myself but will do so when my TE-76 comes
back from repair. I'm not sure how good the results will be
converting Trinity PCG to Triton, as Synthesis is different.
But it seems like a good starting point to me and maybe it's better
than rebuilding everything from scratch.
However Trinity is really unique, I'd love to get my hands at least
on a rack one.
http://alchemist.sourceforge.net
I have not tried it myself but will do so when my TE-76 comes
back from repair. I'm not sure how good the results will be
converting Trinity PCG to Triton, as Synthesis is different.
But it seems like a good starting point to me and maybe it's better
than rebuilding everything from scratch.
However Trinity is really unique, I'd love to get my hands at least
on a rack one.