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#421930 - 06/02/16 03:12 PM
Re: Overload of HQ Casio MZ-x tutorial vids
[Re: FransN]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/22/02
Posts: 6020
Loc: NSW,Australia
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Hi Frans, I don't really have all that many, mainly because they used to take me hours to do. I didn't like using EMC for the conversion , because sometimes it got the drum mapping wrong, it took tempo increases/decreases out of intro's /endings , so I really only used it if given no other choice. My yammie styles I did from an actual midifile of the style. The older ones were easy enough , except for remapping the drums for the pa800, with the pa3x and the XG drum maps, the job became easier. I Idid some biab conversions, a couple of ketron's including drum samples for the live drums. Some I did for experimentational purposes, ( over at korg forum we were trying to work out if biab could be used as a source of styles for the pa800, there weren't that many 3rd party styles available at the time) , a few I did as requests. The odd one I did for myself.
Sorry for going off topic, guys.
Happy to give you a copy, but whether or not there would be anything of use to you is another matter. I mainly play ballads , jazz/swing.
_________________________
best wishes Rikki 🧸
Korg PA5X 88 note SX900 Band in a Box 2022
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#421933 - 06/02/16 03:36 PM
Re: Overload of HQ Casio MZ-x tutorial vids
[Re: Bachus]
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Senior Member
Registered: 05/16/09
Posts: 1415
Loc: Netherlands
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#422045 - 06/07/16 07:44 AM
Re: Overload of HQ Casio MZ-x tutorial vids
[Re: Bachus]
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/31/01
Posts: 3602
Loc: Maryland
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Owners are not complaining about the performance of the key action.
A post from Facebook : I've found the non-weighted Casio keys to be notoriously inconsistent. Sometimes you get one that's quiet...sometimes it's noisy. The culprit is inconsistent application of the grease they use to lubricate the keys. That grease keeps the plastic pieces from clicking when they, inevitably, touch. You see, the entire key mechanism has no springs, and the keys are manufactured in strips (rather than individually). The only thing keeping keys in place are plastic slots they fit into. This is very different from the standard Fatar keyboard that keeps each key individually placed with a spring and, often, felt. Casio's keys are cheap to manufacture and, consequently, are one of the things that keep their costs down....which is entirely appropriate for their consumer-grade keyboards but, as you point out, NOT the greatest decision for their pro gear.
Edited by DanO1 (06/07/16 07:45 AM)
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