I think most people confuse a manual with a tutorial. That isn't the purpose of a manual. A manual lays out the capabilities and the operational path for a product, a tutorial assumes you don't know how to operate a product at all, and steps you through the initial operation of the product.

If you want tutorials, contact your manufacturer. Or PAY someone to write them (don't steal their .PDF's!). Make it worth their while.

Thing is, I'm amazed at the confusion people have here at figuring out stuff that has been on the last two or three arrangers they have had! People buying new arrangers before they have bothered to figure out the one they have. I imagine half of them go for features they don't even know is already on the one they have! In fact, half the people here probably use arrangers the same way they did when they first got their first arranger! Free panel, call up everything as you go along.

Trouble is, of course, that first arranger they bought had maybe 30 styles, 60 sounds total, and no panel memory! If that's how you want to run things, stick to an old arranger..

If not, crack the manual, use the myriad resources on the web to talk to people that HAVE figured out how to do stuff, and figure out that, if you want to buy a wonder machine that can do a million things, you MIGHT need to work just a bit harder than that first arranger you bought.

You buy a car, it doesn't come with instructions on how to drive...
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!