Owner's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Panel & Display
- Main Display
- Setup
- Basic Operation
- Sounds
- Styles
- Songs and Audio
- Phrase Pads
- Albums
- Demo
- Mixer
- Performance Memory
- DSP Effects
- Keyboard Part Effects
- Controllers
- Microphone
- Scale Tuning
- MIDI I/O
- USB Storage Devices
- Utility Settings
- Expansion
- Sound List
- Style List
- Song List
- Phrase Pad List
- Part Effect List
- Global Effect List
- Insert Effect List
- Chord List
- Controller Function List
- Short Cut+ Chart
- MIDI Implementation List
38
Adjust the Split Point as follows:
1. Press the “Split” button on the main menu or press [GLOBAL SETTINGS] - “Keyboard” to bring up the Split Setting
menu.
2. Press the Chord name and use the [DATA DIAL] and [<]/[>] buttons to set a split point. Or, press the actual keyboard
key to set your desired split point.
The default chord split point is F#3, which is the same as the left hand split point. However, the two split points can be
set to dierent positions as needed.
To set two split points at the same time, press “Chord+L” to turn it on. Now these two split points will change together.
Tips:
Split Point (Left) cannot be set lower than Split Point (Chord), and Split Point (Chord) cannot be set higher
than Split Point (Left).
Chord Basics
This section is a brief introduction to the basics of chords.
Chord Construction
When three or more notes are played together, they form a chord. A chord is the basic component of harmony, and
each note in the chord is generally built according to a principle of thirds.
In most music, the fundamental chord is the “triad.” The notes that make up a chord are determined according to their
position: the lowest note is called the “root”, the one a third interval above the root is called the “third”, and the one a
fth interval above the root is called the “fth”.
Styles
Sound R1, R2, R3
Sound R1, R2, R3