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syzmikaktivity
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« on: August 31, 2007, 01:26:46 PM » |
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Do the songs I create in JS have a copyright? If I want to use one of those songs on a CD I am making, can I do that? L8r
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muz
Newbie

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« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2007, 06:47:45 PM » |
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Yes, you can use the songs you downloaded with Mp3Mix (as a subscriber) on a CD you are making. Only the individual riffs are copyrighted against others using them in a similar music factory - but when you use the riffs and strums with chords and make a song - the song is all yours! We want our subscribers to make money with their music!
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Jumper
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« Reply #2 on: September 07, 2007, 12:18:23 PM » |
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Also, if you want to get the loops to use on your own computer with programs such as Sony ACID, you can purchase them at http://www.jloops.com.
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wiktorious
Newbie

Posts: 5
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« Reply #3 on: December 19, 2007, 06:36:41 AM » |
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I purchased the complete set of jloops and now I find they do not work with Sony ACID! Your loops are not acidized, I mean they work only at tempo 100 I think.
If I change tempo, they start sounding funny in terms of tone as if they are stretching...now what do I do?
I am surprised because if they are the same sound files used in jamstudio online, they should work in ACID, right?...or am I missing something here?
Pls reply.
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Jumper
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« Reply #4 on: December 21, 2007, 02:24:19 PM » |
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Hey there Wiktorious. I looked into the problem a bit, and the problem seems to be with ACID. The more you change the tempo, the more distorted WAV files become, which is what our loops are. ACID only allows you to modify loops by small amounts without distortion, which is unfortunate. And remember, our three base tempos are 70, 100, and 134.7 (not 135).
I was able to use the T100 and T134.7 WAV files in ACID without any troubles, but at tempo 70, ACID didn't like me much. Again, all these problems seem to be with the program, rather than our files, as they are just WAVs.
Sorry for the trouble, but let us know of any other problems.
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Jumper
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« Reply #5 on: December 21, 2007, 02:29:19 PM » |
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Just as a follow-up...I tried doing the same thing in Steinberg Cubase LE, and everything worked just fine. Thus, the problem above lies with ACID.
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Andy-Roo
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« Reply #6 on: December 21, 2007, 03:32:37 PM » |
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Yea I tried the same thing in Pro Tools, Acid and Cubase and Acid was the only program that they sounded weird in when you change tempo. It sucks but what can you do?
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wiktorious
Newbie

Posts: 5
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« Reply #7 on: December 23, 2007, 01:06:45 AM » |
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Thanks Jumper & Andy for your replies!
Guess I have to look out for some other loop software, do u know of any in which jloops would work well?
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Jumper
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« Reply #8 on: December 27, 2007, 11:20:06 AM » |
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Well, ACID works OK at higher JS tempos (89.09-151.1954), but only as long as you don't stretch much past that. I've used Cubase here and that seems to have worked OK also. I think that generally, everything will work as long as you don't stretch it too much. The thing down at tempo 70 in ACID was strange, but I can't imagine every program would have that problem. I do know that you can't use jLoops in Garageband right now because of the file type. If someone figures out an easy way to convert tens thousands of files to .avi instead of .wav or .mp3, let us know!
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