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#7087 - 03/02/07 02:53 AM
Re: How to modify a piano patch for mono playing
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Member
Registered: 11/02/04
Posts: 147
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Originally posted by bthmedicinetree: thanks for the response. Im using an older toshiba satellite laptop (pentium III 1.0ghz, 30gb hard drive) and I dont have any MIDI software. Whats the name of one I could get? I do have an Edirol USB to MIDI interface to hook the KB up to my laptop. You're welcome. A good all-around MIDI utility is MIDI-OX; see: http://www.midiox.com/ Originally posted by bthmedicinetree: yes, thats the way im doing it now. so even though the piano is called "truestereo" im not losing any sound quality by running it through one speaker in mono? is it not going to sound as good as if I were using a special mono piano patch? if possible id like to just use what I have, but if im going to get better sound with a piano patch designed for mono playing than I will. A true stereo source has components in one channel that are out of phase with the other. Mixing the two will result in phase cancellations and reinforcements that might vary with time, note played, etc. The output labeled "mono" typically just mixes the two channels, and therefore won't solve the problem. You might actually have better results by using the output not labeled "mono". A mono patch is usually best to use with an otherwise mono system configuration.
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Yamaha: Motif XF6 and XS6, A3000V2, A4000, YS200 | Korg: T3EX, 05R/W | Fender Chroma Polaris | Roland U-220 | Etc.
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