T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2330.1 | Depends on which keyboard I use... | WEFXEM::COTE | Strom clods are forming... | Fri May 04 1990 12:16 | 3 |
| Either 5 or 6 octaves centered on C4...
Edd
|
2330.2 | 6 octaves | DUGGAN::RICH | | Fri May 04 1990 13:20 | 4 |
| 36-108
-Neil
|
2330.3 | ear has 10-11 octaves | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 228-5421 FXO/28 | Fri May 04 1990 13:21 | 4 |
| Thanks, I mean, what's the lowest note and what's the highest note it
can play under sequencer control (not from the keyboard).
Thanks
Tom
|
2330.4 | | WEFXEM::COTE | Strom clods are forming... | Fri May 04 1990 13:36 | 1 |
| TX81Z's do B0 thru G8 I bleeves...
|
2330.5 | Looks like 24-108 for the D5; 5 octave keyboard | BAVIKI::GOOD | Michael Good | Fri May 04 1990 14:10 | 0 |
2330.6 | not that I've tested this or anything | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Fri May 04 1990 14:25 | 6 |
| I'd say most synths can probably do 0-127 or somewhat close though each patch
may have its own restrictions. I know on the D50 and other boards and boxes
I've gone both above and below the "keyboard" range. Some do like 10-115 or
somewhat.
Chad
|
2330.7 | | MUSKIE::ALLEN | | Fri May 04 1990 17:48 | 6 |
| The K5 has 5 octaves (C2 to C6) but will respond to MIDI notes 0-127
by using the transpose feature on the keyboard, or through a sequencer.
Bill Allen
(Are you trying to win a bet or something?)
|
2330.8 | Another modest suggestion | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Fri May 04 1990 23:03 | 18 |
| Which reminds me of another "sugestion" for synth makers:
If you're gonna give us a transpose feature, please don't
limit to one octave of transposition.
Nah, why stop there?
Every keyboard capable of sending MIDI should be able to transpose,
Or maybe:
Every instrument capable of receiving MIDI should be able to
transpose over several octaves.
For example, I can't program MT-32 bass tracks from my SQ-80 keyboard
because the keyboard doesn't go "low" enough.
db
|
2330.9 | or maybe 96 | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 228-5421 FXO/28 | Sat May 05 1990 12:25 | 8 |
| Roland MSK 20 is 15 to 113.
MIDI 0 ( C -1) would be 8 hertz, if a synthesizer can play a note of
8Hz, you can't
hear it as a tone, because the ear can't hear it.
This is for a program I wrote. I think I will limit it to
C1 24 to C8 108.
Thanks for all your responses.
Tom
|
2330.10 | C4 != C4 | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Mon May 07 1990 10:52 | 6 |
| Not all synths respond with the same frequency for the same MIDI note numbers.
That is why a keyboard often responds to the full range. Different patches
may map differently to the MIDI note numbers or the synth itself may do
it differently.
Chad
|
2330.11 | EPS 0-127 | PAULJ::HARRIMAN | It's a dog eat dog food world | Mon May 07 1990 11:38 | 11 |
|
The EPS seems to have a fairly intelligent implementation, with a few
zits. You can map a wavesample into any range 0-127, and it doesn't
HAVE to track pitch (i.e. C0 doesn't HAVE to be 8Hz). But the keyboard
might not be able to get to it. Not a problem if you're using a
sequencer, but changing keyboard ranges in performance isn't exactly
a real-time event. You could (architecturally) store 128 wavesamples
in a layer, providing you had the memory to hold them.
/pjh
|
2330.12 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Never trust a Prankster. | Mon May 07 1990 15:36 | 7 |
| In my setup, middle C, note #60, maps to C3, not C4. Using that, the
KX88 will gen note no's down to A0 and up to, uh, F7 (I think).
The SGU's can respond from 0-127, *IF* I wanna bother to map sample
files to those note ranges..
karl, back from sunny Michigan
|
2330.13 | | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 228-5421 FXO/28 | Mon May 07 1990 16:08 | 17 |
| > <<< Note 2330.12 by SALSA::MOELLER "Never trust a Prankster." >>>
>
> In my setup, middle C, note #60, maps to C3, not C4. Using that, the
> KX88 will gen note no's down to A0 and up to, uh, F7 (I think).
>
> The SGU's can respond from 0-127, *IF* I wanna bother to map sample
> files to those note ranges..
>
> karl, back from sunny Michigan
Gee, uh, the octave increment is at C, so it counts B3, then C4.
But the KX88 is a piano-long keyboard, so the bottom key wouldn't be
A0 relative to a C4 middle C, it would be Aminus1. I think it may have
been Helmholtz who called middle C C 4 and the system has been in use
for 100 years.
Tom
|
2330.14 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Never trust a Prankster. | Mon May 07 1990 17:05 | 9 |
| <<< Note 2330.13 by MILKWY::JANZEN "Tom 228-5421 FXO/28" >>>
> I think it may have
> been Helmholtz who called middle C C 4 and the system has been in use
> for 100 years.
Well, I'll be sure to inform Mark of the Unicorn that Performer's MIDI
event lists don't adhere to historic musicological practice.
karl
|
2330.15 | ;-) unbalanced braces | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 228-5421 FXO/28 | Mon May 07 1990 20:42 | 16 |
| Most of what I said about pitch names was wrong.
According to an at least 20-year-old Oxford Companion, here are some
names for middle c:
2 -foot
middle c
helmholtz called it c'
Arthor Tabor Jones called it C3, and the Journal of the Acoustical
Society of America adopted that.
Then later the Journal propsed in 1931 that middle c was C8 (powers of
2, called philosophical pitch because physcial middle C is 256 Hz, 2**8
Hz.)}
My program went out in the mail with C4 for middle C. Tough.
Maybe I'll set a new standard.
Tom
|
2330.16 | C 40 | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 228-5421 FXO/28 | Mon May 07 1990 20:43 | 2 |
| And piano tuners call middle c c 40 because it is the 40th key.
Tom
|
2330.17 | Yamaha is different | KOBAL::DICKSON | | Tue May 08 1990 11:39 | 4 |
| Yamaha apparantly does it different from everybody else. I can't
remember which way is which. But the VISION sequencer has a
'preferences' option where you can tell it whether you want middle C
to be C4 or C3. And one of the choices says "(Yamaha)" next to it.
|
2330.18 | What Roland Does | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Fri May 11 1990 15:39 | 18 |
| The Roland convention (who cares, right?) is to call middle C "C4".
This makes MIDI note number 0 "C-1"
My synths all "respond" to note numbers 0 - 127, but they may "recycle"
the octaves at the extreme low and high ends. This seems more
prevalent on the digital machines, whose digital oscillators can only
output a particular range of frequencies. Thus, the note number where
pitches cycle back to the octave above or below depends on the
oscillator's range (e.g., 2', 4' 8' or 16'). The analog machines
seem more willing to make arbitrarily bizarre sounds when pushed to
their limits.
The actual range of note numbers over which a synth will track pitch
is usually specified on the MIDI implementation sheet. Roland is
particularly conscientious about documenting this.
len.
|