Oh, wow. Certainly clears that up, then. *smile*
BTW off topic I know, but I was just giving that tutorial of yours a listen
a few weeks ago, it's getting a little outdated but is still useful as it
taught me how to use the note editor and talked about a lot of things which
still apply at least for me. And this just came to mind. Those midis and
soundfonts you were playing with, I was just wondering where those came
from, unless if course they are copyrighted or something and you're not
allowed to distribute.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Onj" <[email protected]>
To: "QWS list" <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 7:46 AM
Subject: Re: QWS List Problems with the very first note
NO no, certainly not! It simply delays the initial note data being played
on all tracks, while the patch data is sent. A midi sequencer that acted
like the Microsoft GS wave table without trying would be no sequencer I
would want to associate with at all. Terrible idea. Terrible!
From: Raymond Grote <[email protected]>
on Thursday, February 24, 2011 11:51 AM
Hmm, I should have thought of this. Does this setting also delay notes
when
you play them, like when recording? Or only when playing?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Onj" <[email protected]>
To: "QWS list" <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 3:08 AM
Subject: Re: QWS List Problems with the very first note
This is because in the options of QWS, you have the playback delay set
to
0. Some synths are not fast enough to set your patches and other
information and then immediately play the midi.
With my Juno-G, I have the playback delay set to 350.
This means that after I press space from the beginning of the track,
there
is a period of 350 MS in which QWS sends all relevant patch and
controler
data, then begins playing. Having any modern Roland synth and probably
modern Yamaha synth attempt to play note data and send patch data with a
playback delay of 0 is going to exibit the behavior you have mentioned.
Consider setting the playback delay to something you are comfortable
with,
and that allows your first notes to be heard in a satisfactory manner.
I hope that helps.
From: Steve Matzura <[email protected]>
on Thursday, February 24, 2011 1:44 AM
Has anybody had the problem of the very first note or chord of a piece
of music seemingly being cut off or played ever so minorly too fast?
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