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Kinetic
is a groove-oriented audio/MIDI workstation for the PC. It is the latest
application from Cakewalk, best known for its Sonar sequencer and
Project5 software studio. Kinetic is designed to make it easy and fast
to create, arrange and perform with grooves.
While the application has similarities to
Sonar's Project5 and Apple's Garageband, Kinetic stakes out new
territory. What makes it unique is how Cakewalk has focused on
groove-oriented production. Kinetic is built on the idea of a "groove"
being the basic building block of a song. A Kinetic groove is built of
up to 16 tracks of audio or virtual instrument loops. The application
comes with an extensive library of audio loops and virtual instrument
patterns. Browse through directories of loops and patterns, organized by
style, to select the loop you want to assign to any of the 16 tracks.
With the virtual instrument patterns, you
select a soft-synth "patch" independent of the pattern. This process is
very streamlined. You just click on the pattern you like in the left
side of the window, and then the patch in the right hand side. For
example, you can select a drum pattern, and then browse for a drum kit
that gives you the sound you want with that pattern. Both the patterns
and the patches are easily edited, so you can tweak or create new ones
to meet your needs.
Once you have a groove built, you can assign it
to any button on the "groove pad". The Groove Picker is tool for
organizing and accessing your grooves. The Groove Picker has four
buttons, A-D, that toggle between four sets of sixteen buttons, labeled
1-16. This gives you instant access to any of 64 grooves that can be
saved within a file. This works very similarly to hardware groove
workstations.
Once you've tweaked your grooves and saved them
to locations on the Groove Picker, you can use them for live
performance, or arrange them into songs. The buttons on the Groove
Picker can be assigned to respond to MIDI controllers, making it easy to
use a hardware controller to switch grooves. If you want to arrange them
into a song, the Song Arranger makes short work of it. You can also
export grooves into audio files to be used in other applications, or
with hardware samples and groove boxes.
Cakewalk is marketing Kinetic to the DJ/remix
crowd, but the program is flexible enough that it could be used for any
groove-oriented music.
Program Tour
Kinetic's interface puts all the tools you need
to make electronic music on one screen.

Kinetic's interface has three main sections,
from top to bottom:
- The Groove Mixer, where you organize your
grooves and adjust channel settings;
- The Part Editor, where you select patterns
and patches for each channel;and
- The Song Arranger, where you can put grooves
together into songs.
Groove Mixer
The Groove Mixer is made up of two parts, the
Groove Picker and the Mixing Strip.

The Groove Picker is used to organize, select
and audition grooves. You can select any of the groove buttons, and then
tweak the existing groove, or build a new one. Grooves can easily be
copied from one pad to another, making it easy to organize up to 64
grooves. Preview grooves using the Groove Picker's dedicated Play,
Rewind and Jog buttons.
Within each groove, the Groove Picker saves the
setting for the Mixing Strip, so you can copy a pattern to several pads,
and have set different mix settings for each copy.
The Mixing Strip is where you assign loops and
patterns to channels, and where you can set levels for each.

It has a fixed 16 channels, and each can be
assigned either a soft synth pattern or an audio loop. Clicking on a
channel selects it so you can assign patterns or loops or edit the
sounds and effects used on that channel. You can also mute or solo
tracks and adjust panning and levels.
The mixer is streamlined, eliminating the
complexities of things like eq, aux sends and groups. Effects are
instead applied as needed to individual tracks. This makes it very easy
to use, without overly limiting what you do.
Part Editor
Once you've selected a channel, you can work
with its pattern or loop in the Part Editor. The Part Editor is split
into two panes, where you can browse and select Patterns and Patches.
When you edit a pattern or patch, the options available in the Pattern
Editor adapt to the task you're doing.

To add something to a channel, browse to a
pattern using the left pane, and select a patch using the right pane.
This is very fast, because all the options are on screen.
You can also create or tweak patterns and
patches here by clicking the Edit Pattern or Edit Patch buttons on the
left side of the screen. The Pattern Editor provides a piano-roll style
interface, where you can edit the details of a pattern, including notes,
velocities and automation. You can draw notes on screen, or record
directly into the pattern editor, if you have an external MIDI keyboard
or controller. The Patterns pane also lets you load MIDI patterns into
Kinetic, and save new ones that you create.
The Patch Editor lets you customize patches and
setup a chain of effects for the channel. The most commonly used
controls, filter cutoff, resonance, attack, release, tone and portamento
time, are immediately available for editing. Clicking on the instrument
icon opens it up in a dedicated window, where you can make more detailed
edits.

The Patch editor is also where you apply audio
effects. All the common effects are provided, including chorus, flange,
tempo delay, parametric EQ, compression and reverb. The effects are
high-quality, but basic. If you have other DX effects or "wrapped" VST
effects, they will be available in Kinetic. In the effects bin, you can
build a chain of effects, which provides a lot of power and flexibility,
without adding complexity.
Song Arranger
Once you've created a set of grooves and
variations, and assigned them to buttons in the Groove Picker, you can
arrange them in the Song Arranger.

Kinetics makes arranging a no-brainer. Just
select the groove you want, and then "paint" it into the song arranger
window. You can move grooves around and copy and paste them to build
your arrangement. You can also record your arrangement directly into the
Song Arranger.
In addition to arranging your grooves, the Song
Arranger lets you automate volume, panning and effects settings.
Presets/Sounds
To help you get started making music, Cakewalk
has included hundreds of music patterns and ACID-format audio loops. For
the synths, they included hundreds of instrument patches that feature
classic Roland drum and synth sounds. The patterns, loops and patches
are good quality, and make it easy to get started with the program. The
loops and patterns focus primarily on popular electronica genres. Most
users will use the patterns as starting points to be tweaked and
customized. Once you get the hang of the program, you can make new
patterns and import audio loops and create music in any groove-based
style.
Sample groove
The soft-synth patches in Kinetic don't match
the quality of high-end soft synths. Most high-end soft-synths, though,
cost as much as or more than Kinetic. Kinetic's sounds are good, easy on
your computer, and can be tweaked and effected extensively. Users that
want a wider palette can import Kinetic files into Project5 for
additional flexibility.
Working with other applications &
hardware
While Kinetic provides a great deal of
capability, most users will want to use it with other applications and
equipment. To begin with, you can play Kinetic's synths over MIDI. It
also can easily be configured so that the on-screen buttons and knobs
respond to hardware MIDI controllers. Right clicking on the button in
Kinetic brings up a dialog box where you can select the MIDI controller
you want to use, or click a button to have Kinetic "learn" what you want
to use. This allows you to switch grooves from a keyboard or from pads,
and modify the synth sounds using a controller's knobs or sliders.
Kinetic
lets you import audio files in regular .wav or groove clip format.
Kinetic includes an "Export This Groove" option that lets you take any
groove and save it out as a wave file. This makes it easy to build loops
for use in other applications, or for hardware groovebox/samplers. You
can also export Kinetic songs as wav files.
Finally, if more features are needed, Kinetic
files can be opened in Project 5, and Kinetic is Rewire-compatible, so
it can be used with Sonar and other Rewire-compatible applications.
Limitations
Cakewalk has limited Kinetic in many ways in
order to keep it easy and fast to use. For example, tracks are limited
to 16, there's no support for VST instruments and no audio recording
capabilities. While this limits Kinetic's functionality, the limitations
are reasonable ones and help optimize Kinetic for groove-oriented work.
It's very easy to learn Kinetic, because most controls are available
on-screen at all times. Having a fixed set of capabilities should also
make it easy to share Kinetic files, which could lead to the types of
communities that have grown around applications like Reason.
Summary
Kinetic is designed to make it easy to create,
arrange and perform groove-oriented music. Cakewalk has done a great job
of limiting the scope of the program to make it easy and fun to use, and
has focused on making the most important tasks easy to perform.
In our testing, we encountered no errors, even
on a machine that met the minimum requirements.
Cakewalk is targetting Kinetic to DJ's and
remixers, and no traditional music knowledge is required to use the
program. However, it's a powerful tool for creating and interacting with
grooves, and could be used by anyone wanting to create groove-based
music.
You could nitpick the choices that Cakewalk
made in streamlining Kinetic, but the bottom line is that it's got
everything you need to start building groove-based music, it does it
well, and it makes the process fun.
Project5 owners may be interested in Kinetic
for its library of patterns, patches and loops, and could also use
Kinetic as a streamlined sketchpad. Kinetic is an excellent choice for
people just getting into computer music that don't need audio recording
capabilities. Its focused feature set and usable interface make it
perfect for users daunted by more complex applications. Finally, paired
with a MIDI keyboard controller, it can be used as a powerful
groove-based performance tool.
System requirements
- Windows 2000, XP (Note: Kinetic does not
support Windows 95/98/ME/NT)
- 800 MHz processor
- 256 MB RAM
- 180 MB free hard disk space
- 800 X 600, 16-bit color
- CD-ROM drive (for installation)
- Windows-compatible sound card (Required for
audio playback)
- Windows-compatible MIDI interface (Required
to connect to external MIDI devices)
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