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Derivative
Bipolar Bear
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Dublin
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| quote: | on the spec for the microkorg it says it has midi in, out and thru,
does this not mean i can plug it into my audiophile and use it the same way as a vst and also as a midi keyboard?
sorry if this contradicts what u just said, still trying to get my head round it! |
most synths have those.
you connect the MIDI out port on your audiophile to the MIDI in port on your microkorg. that allows your soundcard to send MIDI clock to the korg and tell it what to do.
if you want to use it as a midi controller you need to connect the MIDI out port on the microkorg to the MIDI in port on the audiophile. Then, depending on what you want to control you will need to assign MIDI cc numbers to the MIDI out controller in your Digital Audio Workstation (DAW). there are a set of standard numbers which refer to funcions like filter cutoff and amp envelope attack etc etc. but depending on the synth and depending on the feature set there will probably be some unique c numbers too. your host may have a template for the microkorg saving you the trouble of having to do this but its probably best to google cc numbers for the microkorg.
if you want to use the microkorg to control virtual soft synths then you might need to set up a virtual MIDI cable. its free but you need to install the MIDI Yoke driver (google it) and do the routing manually.
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MIDI thru you probably wont use unless you have loads of MIDI outboard gear. MIDI thru is used to daisy chain MIDI devices, saving you the hassle of routing everything through a MIDI interface. However, the more MIDI gear in the daisy chain, the higher the latency, which will make MIDI devices later on in the chain trigger out of time. But for daisy chaining 2 or 3 devices its generally ok.
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keyboards. a 3 octave keyboard really isnt that bad. i played on a virus indigo 2 and with octave transpose you get used to the limited range of the keyboard. if you are sequencing parts of your songs (i.e. not recording them live), you probably wont even use more than 3 octaves. check the quality of the microkorg keyboard because i heard it was plasticky shit.
the microkorg should have an octave transpose function. i cant think of a modern synth that doesnt have it. and if there is one it is a fu.cking retarded move by the manufacturer.
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other synths in this price range? well the alesis ion is fairly inexpensive and it has alot of neat features. the LCD display has alot of visual feedback with graphs and so forth to show you what action the envelopes and filter has when you use them. that is just a brilliant idea and it should be on every synth with a visual display. its a pretty versatile synth too and its not hard to program.
another good one is the roland SH-32. its like a cutdown JP-8000 in some ways although the filter is crap (it 'zippers' and isnt smooth). but its probably one of the easiest synths to program and the presets are pretty good so its a good place to start if your sound design isnt awesome. dont be fooled by its cheap appearance - its made of steel and its built like a brick shit house.
if you can stretch to a korg ms2000b then that one is a cracker. its packed with features (including a decent vocoder) and the keyboard is quite good. you can still find the rack version second hand for really cheap so if you cant afford the b model try to find the r model on ebay instead.
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Dec-11-2005 13:27
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