Korg Electronic Keyboard Electronic Keyboard User Manual


  Open as PDF
of 1127
 
Program P0: Play 0–9: Control Surface
27
Absolute parameters usually control a single Program
parameter, such as Oscillator 1 Transpose. The
Program and Tone Adjust parameters mirror one
another; when you change one, the other will change
to match.
Relative parameters typically adjust two or more
Program parameters simultaneously. For instance,
Filter/Amp EG Attack Time affects a total of six
Program parameters. The value of the Relative
parameter shows the amount of change to these
underlying Program parameters.
When the Relative parameter is at 0 (in the center of
the knob or slider), the underlying Program
parameters are unchanged.
The meanings of higher and lower settings can vary,
depending on the specific parameter. Unless noted
otherwise, they work as follows:
When the Relative parameter is at +99 (the maximum),
the Program parameters are all at their maximum as
well. Similarly, when the Relative parameter is at –99
(the minimum), the Program parameters are at zero.
Relative Tone Adjust parameter scaling
A few of the Program parameters controlled by
Relative Tone Adjust are bipolar, meaning that they can
be either positive or negative (instead of just positive).
When these Program parameters are set to negative
values, Tone Adjust may behave differently from the
description above.
For instance, if EG Intensity is set to a negative value,
Relative Tone Adjust will take it from 0 to –99, like the
inverse of the diagram above. EG Sustain works
differently; if it’s set to a negative value, Tone Adjust
takes it from 0 down to the programmed value, and
then up to +99, as shown below.
Relative Tone Adjust parameter scaling: EG Sustain
Meta parameters don’t affect Program parameters
directly. Instead, they affect the way that other Tone
Adjust parameters work. For instance, Multisample
Min # and Max # set the minimum and maximum
values of the Tone Adjust Multisample parameter.
Selected parameter information
This status line shows detailed, read-only information
about the currently selected Tone Adjust parameter.
(Control) [Knob1…8, SW1…16,
Slider1…8, Slider M]
This is the physical controller assigned to the Tone
Adjust parameter. Slider M is the Master Slider.
(Assignment) [Full Parameter Name]
This shows the full name of the parameter assigned to
the controller. You can change this using the “Assign”
parameter, below.
Value [Current Parameter Value]
This shows the current value of the parameter. The
range of values will vary depending on the parameter
assigned to the control.
Type [Relative, Absolute, Meta]
This shows the type of the parameter, which relates to
how edits to the parameter are saved. For more
information, see “Absolute, Relative, and Meta
parameters” on page 26.
Stored Value [Original Parameter Value]
This shows the original value of the parameter, before
the effects of Tone Adjust. It applies only to Tone
Adjust parameters which control a single Program
parameter.
If you un-assign a Relative parameter from a control, it
will revert to this value.
Knobs 1–8
Assign [List of Tone Adjust assignments]
This lets you assign a Tone Adjust parameter to the
knob. For a full list of the available choices, please see
“Common Tone Adjust Parameters” and “HD-1 Tone
Adjust Parameters,” below.
Per-Oscillator parameters apply to OSC1 and 2
individually, and are marked as such: [OSC1] and
[OSC2}.
Each controller can be assigned to only one parameter,
and each parameter can be assigned to only one
controller.
To swap a parameter from one control to another,
you’ll need to first un-assign it from the old control,
and then assign it to the new control.
99
00
Relative Tone Adjust Value
Parameter
Value
As Programmed
0–99 +99
99
-99
00
Relative Tone Adjust Value
Parameter
Value
As Programmed
0–99 +99
Assign
Value