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#233090 - 04/25/08 01:49 PM
Re: legato play
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Member
Registered: 09/06/06
Posts: 365
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Originally posted by Diki: That's pretty easy to test, I would have thought...
Play one note (any velocity), hold it. Play another while you are holding it. Does it play with the attack transients of the first?
There's your answer...
AFAIK, Yamaha's SA voice tricks are NOT based on velocity, but on whether you are actually holding a note down when you play the second... Play detached, you get the attack. Play legato, no attack. Velocity has been used long before SA, to get multi sample dynamics, or to trigger 'bends' or hammer-ons on guitars, etc.
The SA voice system also uses intervals BETWEEN notes you play to determine if elements like fret squeak get triggered. It's totally different from just velocity triggering... Yes Diki that's one of the tests I used, another being playing legato compared with playing staccato at low velocity. It's difficult even so to be black & white about it since the differences in attack, in changing purely from leg. to stac. - if any - are to me, slight and much more obvious attack changes come about with a deliberate increase in velocity. (Talking sax & trumpet here.) The information display for the SA guitars states "Legato notes played within an interval of a 4th sound as a hammer on/off or slide". (To trigger the latter requires high velocity). That works. Fret noise is always described as being "added randomly". John [This message has been edited by jwyvern (edited 04-25-2008).]
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