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#176668 - 11/09/01 07:16 AM
New PSR2000 owner
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Member
Registered: 11/09/01
Posts: 217
Loc: Westfield, Massachesetts, USA
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Goodmorning to all. I have been reading the keyboard forum for a few days now and am encouraged to find others who have so much background knowledge of arranger keyboards. I just purchased a new PSR 2000 which arrived last night. This is mt first arranger keyboard. Just so you know what you're dealing with here, I have played piano since I was 6 years old. I am not a big techno type person. I play the clavinova yamaha cv-107 in a contemporary Christian band every weekend at church and at other functions. I bought the PSR 2000 so I could make arrangements at home in order to fill out some thin areas in our performances and to get into song writing and recording. I know the clavinova has all the arranger features, but to be honest, it is not as user friendly as the PSR. And, I believe the PSR is compatible with the CV-107 and whatever I arrange at home, will transfer to the other keyboard. So, for you experts out there, is there a clavinova site that is as dynamic and informative as this site? Next question, not related, How do I get the effect of a cymbal roll that crescendos from soft to loud then fades away on the PSR. It is on the demo. Is that another sample they used or can I do that on the keyboard. Thank you in advance from a struggling beginner
B2
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#176673 - 11/09/01 08:30 AM
Re: New PSR2000 owner
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Member
Registered: 11/09/01
Posts: 217
Loc: Westfield, Massachesetts, USA
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Beakybird, As a beginner, this is what I am ignorant about, I am familiar with cakewalk, and I guess what you're saying is, for the keyboards to be real effective, they are not "stand alone" solutions. Do I in fact need a computer sequencing tool such as cakewalk? My next question is this, How do you manage your song creation process? Example, can you take me from the start of your process to finish. Looking for techniques and recommendations. What do you record first, then how do you store , mix, edit and record your music. You don't need to get into intense details, just an overview with some recommended reading or web sites that will educate me more. I am quickly becoming a sponge in my free time. Thanks for your response. I look forward to your comments Brian
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#176676 - 11/09/01 11:56 AM
Re: New PSR2000 owner
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/27/01
Posts: 2227
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I do recommend Cakewalk. Hopefully, someone will create Cakewalk instrument definitions for the PSR 2000 soon. If no one else does it, I will.
You don't have to spend a real lot of money, but I recommend Pro Audio 9 at least if you're going to record audio. Buy it, read the manual in your spare time.
What I do for songwriting is I find a style that comes closest to the song idea I have. I record the chord progression and style onto Cakewalk. Then I edit. Do I want the drum roll from another style or another midi file? I copy and paste it into the measure. Is there a special break or build up that I couldn't express through the prefab Yamaha style, then I play it or paint it with my mouse in the appropriate measures. Do I have a better bass idea? I punch it in where I want it. Do I want the song to slow down towards the end? I go to the tempo view in Cakewalk, and with the stroke of my mouse, the song slows down. I use Cakewalk to select other instruments because with a big computer screen, you can see a lot more of what's available inside the PSR 2000. You can select other channels on your computer screen to insert extra parts. You need to decide how far you want to go to get what you want. Maybe your song fits perfectly with a style. But if one style fits better for the verse, and another fits better for the chorus, then it's great to use Cakewalk. You can record the verse on one file. REcord the chorus on another file and paste them into the same file and do some editing to make it all smoothe. REmember when you transpose with Cakewalk, don't transpose your drums! It will sound horrible!
Good luck,
Larry
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