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#7140 - 01/08/03 08:31 AM New PSR 290
Anonymous
Unregistered


Hi everyone. I just got a Yamaha PSR 290 for Christmas and am very happy with it. I am having some issues connecting to pc. Using midi as opposed to To Host, but surely my challenges are lying in my inexperience with this new hobby. Can anyone be so kind as to point me in the direction of info regarding midi connecting to pc and such? I'm enjoying the time spent on this new hobby, but I'm anxious to move to the next level. Any help would be appreciated.

Thanks for your time...
Magnaman

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#7141 - 01/08/03 06:36 PM Re: New PSR 290
rattley Offline
Member

Registered: 11/14/99
Posts: 834
Loc: Punta Gorda Florida USA
Hello................You can use an in and out regular midi cable connection OR the to host connection to a computer serial port or USB port, but make sure you install the correct Yamaha driver if you use the to host setup.

The weblink below has GREAT Yamaha PSR stuff. http://home7.inet.tele.dk/js/musik/740pages/

This link below has some good info on midi setups http://www.borg.com/~jglatt/tutr/miditutr.htm
http://www.music.eku.edu/faculty/davis/MIDIp2.html

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#7142 - 01/12/03 07:16 AM Re: New PSR 290
OldSchool Offline
Member

Registered: 01/27/01
Posts: 217
Loc: Lexington, KY USA
magnaman:
Two years ago my sibs gave me a PSR-270 (the precurser to your keyboard), with exactly the same result! I still have it...of course, I also now have mountains of other stuff. However, as a first MIDI instrument, that keyboard will do quite a lot!

If you're using the standard game port connection, make sure that "In" on your keyboard is connected to "Out" on your computer. I made that same mistake, and have since corrected it for a dozen or so other newbies. I'd get a nice book on MIDI, or use the tutorials at http://www.harmony-central.com/MIDI/ (rattley's links send you there). You don't need a lot of knowledge of the technical aspects of MIDI to get your Yamaha to produce, but it'll help when you decide to move further along.

If you don't already have any, you'll also need some sort of sequencing software...which depends on what you know about music in general. I'm an old traditional musician who reads and writes using notes on a staff, so I started with Noteworthy Composer (http://www.noteworthysoftware.com/). One of the less expensive Cakewalk packages will allow "piano scroll" composing, which is a little easier for folks who have more playing than reading chops.

Have fun, and good luck!
_________________________
"The problem with the world is that the ignorant are cock-sure, whereas the intelligent are full of doubt." - Bertrand Russell

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