Steinberg Cubase 4 Midi Devices Manual
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Revision and Quality Control: Cristina Bachmann, Marion Bröer, Heiko Bischoff, Sabine Pfeifer The information in this document is subject to change without notice and does not represent a commitment on the part of Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH. The software described by this document is subject to a License Agreement and may not be copied to other media except as specifically allowed in the License Agreement. No part of this publica- tion may be copied, reproduced or otherwise transmitted or...
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4 Table of Contents 5MIDI devices 6Background 6MIDI devices – general settings and patch handling 14About Device panels (Cubase only) 14Overview (Cubase only) 17The main edit windows (Cubase only) 20Operations in the Edit Panel window (Cubase only) 23Building a control panel – a tutorial (Cubase only) 29Advanced Panel handling 33Building panels for VST Instruments 34Exporting and importing device setups (Cubase only) 34SysEx messages (Cubase only) 39Defining a SysEx device – a tutorial (Cubase only)...
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6 MIDI devices Background The MIDI Device Manager allows you to specify and set up your MIDI devices, making global control and patch selec- tion easy. But the MIDI Device Manager also features powerful edit- ing functions that can be used to create MIDI device pan- els (Cubase only). MIDI device panels are internal representations of external MIDI hardware, complete with graphics. The MIDI device panel editor provides all the tools you need to create device maps where every para- meter of an...
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7 MIDI devices Cubase Studio: When you open the MIDI Device Manager for the first time, it will be empty (because you haven’t installed any devices yet). On the following pages we describe how to add a pre-configured MIDI device to the list, how to edit the settings and how to define a device from scratch. ÖNote that there is an important difference between in- stalling a preset MIDI device (“Install Device”) and import- ing a MIDI device setup (“Import Setup”): •The presets do not include any device...
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8 MIDI devices The Patch Banks list in the left half of the window shows the patch structure of the device. This could simply be a list of patches, but it’s usually one or several layers of banks or groups containing the patches (much like a folder structure on a hard disk for example). You can rename a device in the Installed Devices list by double-clicking and typing – this is useful if you have sev- eral devices of the same model, and want to separate them by name instead of by number. To remove...
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9 MIDI devices Selecting a patch for an installed device If you return to the Project window at this point, you will find that the installed device has been added to the MIDI Output menus (in the track list and the Inspector). Now you can select patches by name, in the following way: 1.Pull down the Output menu (in the track list or Inspec- tor) for a track that you want to play the installed device, and select the device. This directs the track to the MIDI output specified for the device in the...
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10 MIDI devices Patch Structure Patches are structured as follows: Banks are the main categories of sounds – typically patches, performances and drums, as described above. Each bank can contain any number of groups, represented by folders in the list. The individual patches, performances or drum kits are repre- sented by presets in the list. The Commands pop-up menu contains the following items: Create Bank Creates a new bank at the highest hierarchical level of the Patch Banks list. You can rename...