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#349294 - 08/19/12 02:39 AM
Re: E60 Make Up Tools- Help!
[Re: BBBB]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14268
Loc: NW Florida
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If you press the Style Page button TWICE, you get to a nice screen with each Style Part's Volume, Pan, Reverb and Chorus, and a pretty little icon of the Tone type at the top. If you press on the icon, it mutes that sound. Now if you save the Performance, those mutes get saved.
Does the E60 have the D-Beam, too? One of the options for the D-Beam is to mute the ACC Parts (but not Bass and Drums). So you could save the Performance with the ACC mutes on, leave the D-Beam active, and you can now switch the ACC Parts back on any time you want them (and mute them again, quickly).
The REALLY cool thing is, you can STILL mute out ACC Part icons, and have that sound not play at all, but use the D-Beam to toggle on and off the other sounds. It isn't an 'all or nothing' affair.
There's a lot of power under the hood of those things...
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#349296 - 08/19/12 03:15 AM
Re: E60 Make Up Tools- Help!
[Re: BBBB]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14268
Loc: NW Florida
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Oh, and don't forget to take advantage of the Dynamic Arranger feature. This way, as you play louder or softer, the style parts will also get a bit louder or softer. Great with those vel-switched drumkits! There is an edit page (it gets saved to the User Program) so if the rise and fall is more or less than you want, you can adjust it here.
One of the quite astonishing things the Roland's can do is trigger the style from full PianoStyle mode, Bass inversion on, Dynamic arranger on, D-Beam set to turn the ACC Parts on and off (and you permanently mute out the style's piano part/s) and you can get a quite scarily accurate band backing that follows YOUR inversions, YOUR dynamics, and goes from Drums and Bass to fuller accompaniment at your whim. Done well, it is quite amazing.
As you get used to having to HAVE to play three notes before you get a new chord, if you practice playing solos VERY carefully so you only ever hold two notes at a time, the accompaniment can stay on one chord and you can play some quite interesting outside stuff without the chord recognition freaking out.
There's a fairly detailed article I wrote at the Roland-arranger.com website that goes into this in more detail.
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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