the continuum works in this way as well.... every finger gets assigned
its own midi channel and then is tracked over the 3 d playing surface
until full release....you can set its maximum polyphony for 16
channels or less if you are needing free channels on your receiving
modules....playing more than 4 parts will take many weeks to
master.....the EG shape and level is shaped by your pressure/speed.
...quik finger attacks gives percussive results and gradual pressure
increases gives a slow attack....downwards pressure is the sustain
level therefore sustain can fade and return if wanted...
-----Original message-----
From: "stevelenham"
yahoo@...Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 07:31:07 -0600
To:
yamahacs80@yahoogroups.comSubject: [yamahacs80] Re: Poly-aftertouch question + idea
>
>
> --- In yamahacs80@yahoogroups.com, David Rogoff wrote:
> > I can't remember the details (someone helpme out), but there was a
> > master keyboard years ago that could do a pseudo-poly-AT. The
keyboard
> > itself was channel pressure, but it had a mode in which each
keypress
> > went out on a different MIDI channel. It could then fake the
Poly-AT by
> > sending pressure as mod wheel on just the MIDI channel of the
highest
> > (lowest? last?) key pressed.
>
> Thanks David, Laurie et al for your replies. It sounds like the
pseudo-poly-AT idea might have some merit, so I will probably pick up
one of the resistive sensors and have a play with it (for those
interested, they are made by Spectrastrip and available from Mouser in
the US and - less comprehensively and more expensively - Farnell here
in the UK).
>
> Cheers,
>
> Steve L.
>
>
>
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