George ,
First of all, thanks for keeping the rootless chord voicing recognition topic alive. I am very happy to hear that Yamaha is continuing to develop arranger keyboard features to meet the needs of both the professional and hobbyist keyboard player.
In response to George’s statement: “Due to Solton's use of more ‘walking bass line’ type styles and variations, Yamaha will do the same kinds of patterns and will inform the users that by creating such "moving" type styles might cause the chord recognition to not react to the exact fingering chords you think you are playing. The reason for this, as explained to me, is that the algorithm neccessary for making these types of moving styles, is not possible with complex voicings, such as Scott Yee's rootless voicings. So Scott, as I have mentioned to you before, according to my source at Yamaha, making very complex styles is a big reason why the rootless chord voicings won't work in certain keyboards”.....
George, I regularly play rootless voiced (II-V-I) chord progressions with many walking bass line type styles and variations on my Technics KN5000 and have never experienced problems as it easily interpretes my rootless fingered voicings and plays appropriate walking bass lines with ease, even on uptempo tunes. I tried playing the same rootless voiced (II-V-I) chord progressions on the new Technics KN6000/KN6500 as well as the Yamaha 9000pro and found that all of these keyboards were able to interprete and play appropriate walking bass lines with ease as well. I am not sure what the Yamaha rep is referring to here but in my opinion, the Yamaha is already able to both correctly recognize rootless voicings and correctly play appropriate and realistic sounding walking bass lines.
I am pretty sure the rootless chord recognition I am requesting, is not a matter of complexity (algorithms?), but instead, an issue of what chord the manufacterer “chooses” to assign to a “specific” chord voicing played. Solton, as well as all the major arranger keyboard brands already are able to recognize chords and play appropriate moving bass line type styles. My beef with Solton is that they chose to assign more "esoteric type" chords instead of chords used & played in real life by pro musicians. The issue is not complexity but rather “chord recognition assignment”.
I am beginning to wonder now if the rootless chord recognition issue that I brought up is more of a mis-understanding here because this is really a “simple” matter of how the manufacter "decides" what chord to assign the chord voicing played, and not about the need for more complex style parts.
Interesting to note that you bring up musician Ronnie Foster’s name because I had the opportunity to meet him at the Jan 2001 NAMM show in Anaheim and also play and discuss with him this whole rootless chord voicing/recognition issue. He concurred with me that Yamaha's decision to recognize these popularly played rootless voiced chords was a key feature he likes about the Yamaha PSR9000 & 9000pro, because he incorporates rootless style chords in his playing as well. He also acknowledged that Solton's decision to not recognize these rootless type chord voicings to be a serious Solton keyboard limitation and also couldn’t understand why Solton assigned these same chord voicings to esoteric chords instead. I somehow think the Solton guy who assigned those esoteric chord names to these specific chord voicings is not a performing musician. It appears that his decisions were based on petantic music theory, not what is actually played by performing musicians.
I’m still hoping that Solton will consider my request but unless I hear back from them(thru George Kaye) soon, I can only conclude that it was their rigid decision to keep things as they are. This would really be ashamed, because I was so impressed with the SD1 in all other aspects of the keyboard. I still am convinced that it would be VERY EASY for Solton to make the minor (software programing) changes needed to reassign the specific chord voicings in question to match the chord assignments that both Technics and Yamaha use.
Clif, yes, both Technics and Yamaha keyboards both recognize the rootless chord voicings. I think many of Technics styles are more complex (longer style pattern lengths & more densely orchestrated ) than some of Yamaha’s but I am still impressed with Yamaha’s styles. Afterall, complexity (busy) doesn’t necessarily mean better.
For those of you who are new to this board and/or want to be refreshed about the chord voicings and associated chord name assignments in question, here is a link to my original post on this issue:
http://www.synthworld.com/ubbs/Forum37/HTML/001167.html George & Clif, thanks for your continued support and interest in this topic. I'm wondering if Solton will actually make a formal response to my request or just choose to ignore it? Thoughts from others?
Scott
http://scottyee.com [This message has been edited by Scottyee (edited 03-14-2001).]