Loading... visiteurs connectés
vic_peacock
Profil
|
Members
Newbie
|
Sexe non défini
Né(e) le 12 Juil. 1966
(58 ans)
94704 Berkeley
Etats-unis
vic_peacock n'a pas de présentation personnelle pour le moment.
Inscrit : 19 mai 04
Vus : 1,003*
Dernière visite : samedi 3 déc. 2005, 18:46
Heure locale : ven. 8 nov. 2024, 16:01
2 message(s) (0 par jour)
Aucune information
Aucune information
Aucune information
Aucune information
* Le compteur est mis à jour chaque heure
|
Sujets
Messages
Blog
Amis
Mon contenu
Dear friends,
I am not really an expert of MIDI, but I am trying to program a MIDI controller in order to assign some useful functions to buttons, knobs and sliders.
I found that the (extended) MIDI CCs include a "decreasing/increasing" code which takes as parameters: a MIDI CC, the minum value and the maximum value.
My question is:
are there any intrinsic restrictions on the value I can assign to the MIDI CC parameter?
For instance, my controller (M-Audio Ozonic) allows me only to set values in the range 0-127. This prevents me, for example, to program a button that increase/decrease the value of the program-change CC #145 by setting this value as the first parameter of the MIDI CCs #153 and #154.
In general, it seems that it is possible to meta-control only the Standard MIDI CCs as parameter of the extended MIDI CCs. Is it true?
Thank you in advance for your help.
All the best,
Vincenzo
Dear friends,
I would like to ask your help to solve a problem I noticed while playing "naturally decayed" synth or sampled sounds like Piano, guitar, etc..
In this type of instrument, when the key is pressed the sound attacks and, while the key is pressed the sound smoothly decays. In contrast, when the key is released the sound stops.
This type of dynamics is not well simulated by my MIDI guitar converter Roland GI-20. I don't know if it is a general problem. The dynamics is more suited for wind or string instrument such as flute or violin. The attack is ok. The problem is with sustain. While the guitar string is vibrating the controlled sound is "sustained", even for sounds like piano. When the string vibration reaches a lower threshold, the sound is released. In the case of piano the sound ends abruptly.
I don't see any real difference between a guitar string picked and a piano string hammered. So, I believe that the same dynamics should apply for both types of instruments. This would allow us to play the piano-like sound more naturally with a MIDI guitar.
Do you have any idea to overcome this annoying problem? Do you know what type of control messages are sent by the Roland GI-20, and how it is possible to modify/filter the MIDI messages sent by the GI-20.
Thank you in advance.
Best,
Vincenzo
|
Derniers visiteurs
vic_peacock n'a aucun visiteur à afficher..
Amis
Il n'y a aucun ami à afficher.
|
|
|
|
|