User 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
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Acoustic instruments have a note limit determined by a real range. This parameter denes the position in a chord at
which the root note of the current channel shifts down an octave.
4. Retrigger Rule
Press “Retrigger Rule” to bring up a list of retrigger rules.
By adjusting this parameter, you can determine how notes in the current channel respond to chord changes.
The following is a brief introduction of “Retrigger Rule”:
Pitch Shift When a new chord is played, the notes played will bend to the new pitch instead of re-trigger with
new attacks to match the new chord type.
Pitch Shift Root When a new chord is played, the notes played will bend to the new pitch to match the new chord
root.
Retrigger When a new chord is played, the notes played will be stopped, then new notes will be re-triggered
to match the new chord root.
Retrigger Root When a new chord is played, the notes played will be stopped, then new notes will be re-triggered
to match the new chord root in the same octave.
Stop When a new chord is played, the notes played will be stopped.
5. Note Range
Press the note names under “Note Range” and use the [DATA DIAL], [<]/[>] buttons, or press the arrows to change
the note range.
Note range will automatically shift notes which are too high or too low into the range you have set, making the sounds
as realistic as possible.
Styles