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#349330 - 08/19/12 04:29 PM
Re: Divisi parts.
[Re: Diki]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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I still don't think you are getting it, Dennis. I honestly have looked at the Korg's manual VERY carefully. There are NO routines in it whatsoever to do what I am talking about.
I'll try one more time. You play ONE note, and a bari, a t'bone, an alto and a trumpet all play in unison. You play a four note chord, and the bari plays the bottom note, the T'bone the next up, the alto the next up and the trumpet plays the top note. Play two notes and the t'bone and bari play the bottom one, the alto and the trumpet the top one. Go back to playing one note, and they all go back to unison.
I cannot find any way to make a Korg do that. If you can, spell it out for me, please.
The reason the ARX boards are so expensive is that they are actually separate synths in their own right. They don't use the polyphony of the host keyboard, they add to it.
But I still believe that this feature could be added to arrangers (and other synths) without great cost. As I said, this is more a function of the voice allocation routines (not in the oscillator sense, Dennis, but in the part of the keyboard that assigns whole sounds to the keys) more than anything else.
Roland have not yet brought out a TOTL arranger with the ARX slots, so this is FantomG only so far (or maybe the Digital Piano's too), and it doesn't seem likely that Roland have much interest in the TOTL market at the current time.
Voice allocation is a very powerful tool, which I think at the moment, no keyboard really gives you good control over. Take Hammond Perc for instance. Polyphonic, but with a single trigger. In other words, play a chord and all the notes sound. But HOLD that chord, and no further voices sound. Most synths do a naff workaround to get this allocation method, and only the dedicated Hammond clones got it right. Lately, it has started to appear in more arrangers, but usually, it still only applies to the Hammond Perc, despite it being useful for attack transients for woodwinds, brass, even synth sounds.
But these divisi allocations have been largely ignored so far. Some of the better softsynths, and orchestral libraries have routines for them (which tends to bolster my theory that it isn't that complicated to implement) so for instance, you play the 1st violins part and they are all unison, but if you play two notes or more, they play new samples of half (or third etc.) of the players playing. Just like what happens in real life!
Anyway, Dennis, if you can program a PA3 to do this, send me the program and I'll load it up into my friend's PA3 and see what it does. But I think you have your work cut out. There are certainly NO factory programs which do this, and you would think that, if it could, some smart boy at Korg would have done it!
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#349339 - 08/19/12 07:12 PM
Re: Divisi parts.
[Re: miden]
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Member
Registered: 10/25/08
Posts: 45
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#349343 - 08/19/12 08:44 PM
Re: Divisi parts.
[Re: Diki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/31/06
Posts: 3354
Loc: The World
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Okay, as this was outside my area of expertise in sound programming on the Korg, I asked my m8,one of the acknowledged "gurus" of Korg sound programming, Sharp, over at Korg Forums...I gave him a reference to that NAMM demo, and asked if he knew if this was possible on the PA3....here is his reply.....
Hi Dennis. The KRONOS, OASYS and Pa3X can easily do this. DNC inside the Px3X can really make easy work of this too. Everything he spoke about on tuning per layer, splits and even his use of switches and controllers has existed in all KORG keyboards for a very long time. He's using a sound he created that is split and mapped out. On the Pa3X you can copy the OSC's of any existing sound into your new sound and start building up your layers, splits, tuning, DNC and controllers / switches with no problems at all all from a single program. Cheers James
I did also ask if he could pop in here and maybe write a few lines, but he is really SUPER busy so he may not have time...So it seems it is possible after all..
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#349370 - 08/20/12 11:18 AM
Re: Divisi parts.
[Re: Diki]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 12800
Loc: Penn Yan, NY
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I know on the PA3x, you can assign separate parts as mono sounds, and that would do what you asked. There is a factory patch that features a 3 layered brass section, but the trumpet is in mono, so that note jumps all over the chord .... you can't control which note it will take, but I suppose it is based on priority - maybe first, or last not played? So - set up a 3 tone section and make each tone a mono sample - a single note will play them all in unison, but a 3 note chord will assign a tone to each of the chord notes. You would give up the ability to play more than 3 notes in the right hand, though. Not sure I like that idea. The factory patch with the mono trumpet is kinda cool, but it limits some of my creative energy - too much randomness for my taste.
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