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#318822 - 03/09/11 06:49 PM
Re: if you could have 3 wishes for yamaha psr s920
[Re: Diki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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It's not due until October, right? They going to sit on their asses until then?
I don't know what their plans are, Diki....I can only speak for me, and I'll be busy doing clinics and seminars. I suppose they are now working on the Tyros5...I don't know much about the new PSR-"S" series, other than what I've said already, and that is mainly a bunch of guesses. Ian Ian
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Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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#318825 - 03/09/11 07:43 PM
Re: if you could have 3 wishes for yamaha psr s920
[Re: lahawk]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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I'm curious about the chord sequencer that many desire.
How you would use it, other than to fine tune chords in a recording?
It's a REALTIME process, nothing like a 'Chord Track' that some other arrangers have/had. Basically, play the intro, hit the CS Record button, and play the head. Then hit the CS Play button, and ONLY the NTA ( the notes to arranger) get sent to the arranger (or fills and Vars if you want, but it's better if you don't, IMO) and the arranger plays those chords around and around for you, until you hit CS Stop, which doesn't stop the arranger, just the chord input, and you go back to playing. Maybe a bridge, or a vamp, or whatever, then hit CS Play again, and you are back in the head, or hit CS Record again, and do another section to repeat. As the chords get played, you are free to do anything the arranger can do. Change Vars, play fills. Do Break/Fills, change styles, even. In the meantime, while it is playing, BOTH your hands are free to do whatever you want. It's a game changer, live... And yes, you COULD save the Chord Sequence, and recall it later, but unless someone follows my advice and adds some more features, it wasn't that great, because you couldn't edit it. Make a flub, and you have to record the entire head again. Chord Tracks are a better tool for offline composing, unless your chops are up there. Mind you, nothing to stop you recording the CS at a much slowed down tempo, and getting it spot on, then speeding up later...
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#318834 - 03/09/11 09:19 PM
Re: if you could have 3 wishes for yamaha psr s920
[Re: rolandfan]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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For me, the whole 76 and a CS thing falls very naturally into how many pianist/singers accompany themselves. Put the arranger into Pianostyle Mode, with Bass Inv (ON Bass) on, play a little intro, then hit the CS. You now accompany yourself singing the first verse and chorus (or head, whatever), and the Pianostyle tracks your comping AND whatever inversions and slash chords you want. So, you now have your backing.
Now, you hit the CS Play, change setups to maybe more a pad/lead sound and solo your little brain out, go back to the Pianostyle setup, do a bridge in realtime, then hit CS Play again, and now go to a setup with maybe some horns in. Sing another verse, play the horns around it. Still no need to tie up anything playing the chords, so those horn voicings can be MUCH wider and accurate.
And so on, and so forth...
It's basically like being in arranger mode, then going seamlessly to an SMF, then seamlessly back to arranger, and back again, except the SMF's don't need setting up in advance, and you can vary them on the fly, depending on your mood or the audiences.
Revolutionary hardly begins to describe it..!
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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