User Manual
Table Of Contents
- USING THE UNIT SAFELY
- IMPORTANT NOTES
- Contents
- 01: Introduction (Overview and Basic Operation)
- 02: Sound Generator, Section 1 (Playing Sounds)
- Playing in Single Mode
- About the Single Play Screen
- Selecting a Patch
- Selecting the Tones That Will Sound (Tone On/Off)
- Playing Single Notes (Monophonic)
- Part Settings (Part View)
- Selecting the Parameter Controlled by the Realtime Controllers or D Beam Controller (Control Sett...
- Playing Percussion Instruments (Rhythm Set)
- Playing a Sample Set
- Creating a List of Frequently Used Sounds (Favorite)
- Registering a Sound (Regist)
- Recalling a Sound
- Specifying the Volume for Each Step (Favorite Level)
- Changing the Step in Which You Registered a Sound
- Removing a Sound You Registered (Remove)
- Removing All Sound Registrations from a Bank (Remove Bank)
- Registering a Song (Set Song)
- Importing a Text File (Import Text)
- Removing a Text File (Remove Text)
- Switching the Display Font (Font)
- Playing in Live Mode
- Displaying Live Play (Layer/ Split) Screen
- Functions in the Live Play (Layer/Split) Screen
- Selecting a Live Set
- Using the Live Play (Layer/ Split) Screen
- Using the Live Set Part Mixer Screen
- Using the Layer Edit Screen
- Performing with the Arpeggio
- Performing with the Realtime Controllers and D Beam Controller
- Setting Effects
- Adjusting the Master Level
- Making Detailed Settings for a Live Set
- Playing in Studio Mode
- Playing in Single Mode
- 03: Sound Generator, Section 2 (Controlling Sounds)
- 04: Sound Generator, Section 3 (Creating Sounds)
- Creating a Patch
- How to Make Patch Settings
- Saving Patches You’ve Created (Write)
- Functions of Patch Parameters
- Settings Common to the Entire Patch (General)
- Modifying Waveforms (Wave)
- Changing How a Tone Is Sounded (TMT)
- Modifying Pitch (Pitch/Pitch Env)
- Modifying the Brightness of a Sound with a Filter (TVF/TVF Env)
- Adjusting the Volume (TVA/TVA Env)
- Output
- Modulating Sounds (LFO1/2/Step LFO)
- Apply Portamento or Legato to the Sound (Solo/Porta)
- Miscellaneous Settings (Misc)
- Matrix Control Settings (Control 1–4)
- Setting Effects for a Patch (PFX)
- Creating a Rhythm Set
- How to Make Rhythm Set Settings
- Saving Rhythm Sets You’ve Created (Write)
- Functions of Rhythm Set Parameters
- Making Settings Common to the Entire Rhythm Set (General)
- Modifying Waveforms (Wave)
- Changing How a Rhythm Tone Is Sounded (WMT)
- Modifying Pitch (Pitch/Pitch Env)
- Modifying the Brightness of a Sound with a Filter (TVF/TVF Env)
- Adjusting the Volume (TVA/TVA Env)
- Output Settings (Output)
- Setting Effects for a Rhythm Set (PFX)
- Creating a Sample Set
- Creating a Live/Studio Set
- Adding Effects
- Where Effect Settings are Saved
- Turning Effects On and Off
- Making Effect Settings
- Applying Effects in Single Mode
- Applying Effects in Live Mode
- Applying Effects in Studio Mode
- Making Patch Multi-Effects Settings (PFX)
- Making Multi-Effects Settings (MFX1–2)
- Making Chorus Settings (Chorus)
- Making Reverb Settings (Reverb)
- Mastering Effect
- Effects List
- Creating a Patch
- 05: Pads (Using the Pads)
- Using the Pads
- Common Operations for Pads
- 1 SAMPLE PAD (Using the Pads to Play Samples)
- 2 RHYTHM (Using the Pads to Play a Rhythm Set)
- 3 CHORD MEMORY (Using the Pads to Switch Chord Forms)
- 4 ARPEGGIO (Using the Pads to Switch Arpeggio Styles)
- 5 RPS (Using the Pads to Play Phrases)
- 6 RHYTHM PTN (Using the Pads to Play Rhythm Patterns)
- 7 TONE SEL/SW (Using the Pads to Select Tones or Switch Them On/Off)
- 8 TRACK MUTE (Using the Pads to Mute Tracks)
- 9 BOOKMARK (Using the Pads to Recall Frequently Used Screens)
- 10 MIDI TX SW (Using the Pads to Turn External MIDI Transmit Channels (1–16) On/Off)
- 11 EFFECT SW (Using the Pads to Switch the Effects)
- 12 PATCH MFX SW (Using the Pads to Switch Patch Multi-effects)
- 13 PART SELECT (Using the Pads to Select Parts)
- 14 PART MUTE (Using the Pads to Mute Parts)
- 15 USER GROUP (Using the Pads to Register/Recall User Groups)
- 16 FAVORITE (Using the Pads to Register/Recall Favorite Settings)
- Using the Pads
- 06: Sequencer (Creating a Song)
- Playing Back a Song
- Three Ways to Play Back
- Playing a Song (Song Play)
- Loading a Song (Song List)
- Playing a Song (Song Play)
- Operations in the Song Play Screen
- Fast-forwarding or Rewinding during Playback
- Muting the Playback of a Track (MUTE)
- Accessing the Mixer Screen
- Changing the Playback Tempo of the Song
- Playing a Song Repeatedly (Loop)
- Placing Markers in a Song (Marker)
- Changing the Track Display Zoom and Display Order (Zoom/Track Order)
- Naming a Track (Track Name)
- Specifying a Track’s Output Destination (Output Assign)
- Deleting a Song File (Song Delete)
- Song Automatically Loaded at Power-on (When Loading a Project)
- Erasing the Currently-open Song (Song Clear)
- Playing a Standard MIDI File (SMF)
- Playing Phrases (MIDI Phrase)
- Recording MIDI
- Recording Audio
- Editing Songs
- Three Ways to Edit
- Editing a Song (Song Edit)
- Song Utility (Song Util)
- Editing a Phrase (Phrase Edit)
- Phrase Modify Menu
- Aligning a Phrase’s Timing (Quantize)
- Erasing Unwanted Performance Data (Erase)
- Deleting Unwanted Measures (Delete)
- Copying Phrases (Copy)
- Inserting a Blank Measure (Insert)
- Transpose the Key (Transpose)
- Changing the Velocity (Change Velocity)
- Changing the MIDI Channel (Change Channel)
- Modifying the Length of Notes (Change Duration)
- Shifting Performance Data Forward and Back (Shift Clock)
- Thinning Out the Sequencer Data (Data Thin)
- Deleting Blank Measures (Truncate)
- Editing Individual Items of Sequencer Data (Microscope)
- Saving a Song (Song Save)
- Playing Back a Song
- 07: Sampler
- Sampling
- Editing a Sample
- Selecting a Sample (Sample List)
- Displaying Sample Edit Screen (Sample Edit)
- Setting the Start/End Points of the Sample
- Making Settings for Sample (Sample Parameters)
- Removing Unwanted Portions of a Sample (Truncate)
- Boosting or Limiting the High-frequency Range of the Sample (Emphasis)
- Maximizing the Volume of a Sample (Normalize)
- Amp
- Stretching or Shrinking a Sample (Time Stretch)
- Dividing a Sample into Notes (Chop)
- Saving a Sample (Save)
- Saving all samples (Save All)
- 08: Various Settings (Menu and System)
- Menu Reference
- System Settings (Settings Common to All Modes)
- About V-LINK
- 09: Appendix
313
Troubleshooting
Overview Sound 1 Sound 2 Sound 3 Pad Sampler
Menu/System
AppendixSequencer
Sounds will be interrupted if more than 128 voices are used
simultaneously.
• Reduce the number of Tones that you are using.
• Increase the Voice Reserve setting for parts that must not drop
out. (p. 141)
When I play the keyboard, notes do not stop.
Is the pedal polarity of the Hold Pedal reversed?
Check the Hold Pedal Polarity parameter setting (p. 287).
When I press a pad, the sound does not stop sounding.
Could the [HOLD] pad be lit?
Press the [HOLD] pad once again so the light goes out.
The sound is interrupted when I switch studio sets in Studio
mode.
The Fantom-G can use multi-effects to apply a wide variety of
effects, and when you switch studio sets, the multi-effect type
specified by the patch will also change. In Studio mode, the
sound may be interrupted when this occurs. If you want to
switch sounds without interruption while you perform, please
use Live mode or Single mode.
The sound is interrupted when I switch patches in Single mode
or Live mode.
If you turn the Patch Remain parameter (p. 294) “ON,” you’ll be
able to switch patches without interrupting the sound.
However, this function applies only to the most recently
selected sound; notes of a sound selected prior to that will be
interrupted.
When switching Patches in Single mode, the volume and other
parameters set with Control Changes end up being reset.
Set Control Remain parameter (p. 294) to “ON.” Even once they
have switched Patches, Control Change messages that have
been received are carried forward, so even when switching a
Patch whose level is turned all the way down by a Control
Change volume message, the level remains unchanged.
If the Tone Delay time value is set to the note, then does the
delay time not change beyond a fixed length when the tempo is
slowed down?
There is a maximum permissible value for the Delay Time
parameter (p. 103). So, if the time setting is specified in terms of
a note value, and the tempo is slowed down, this maximum
permissible value will be reached, and it cannot be increased
further. The upper time limit for each is the maximum value
that can be set other than the numerical value for the beat.
Even when I set the Pan for a Patch completely to one side,
sound still comes from the other channel...
The Fantom-G’s internal effects are in stereo, so if you have
effects applied to a Patch, even if the Pan is set all the way to
one side, you will still be able to hear sounds of the effect
component from the other channel.
Sometimes, when playing legato, the pitch won’t rise. Why is
this?
When the Legato Switch parameter (p. 105) is “ON,” and the
Legato Retrigger parameter (p. 105) is “OFF,” and you hold
down keys in the high register to play legato, the upper pitch
limit of the wave may be exceeded, so that the pitch does not
rise as far as you expect, but will stop rising at a certain point.
Additionally, if differing upper pitch limits are used for the
waves of a Patch that uses multiple tones, it may stop being
heard in MONO. When making large pitch changes, set the
Legato Retrigger parameter to “ON.”
The notes sound strange in the upper registers of the keyboard.
Sometimes when playing the keys in the upper part of the
Fantom-G’s keyboard, the sound may stop, or the pitch may
stop rising; or with certain keys, there may be intermittent
noise. This occurs mainly when the Fantom-G’s upper pitch
limit is exceeded, so this issue doesn’t arise in the ranges
normally used. But, in any case, it does not indicate a
malfunction.
The same patch sounds different depending on the sound
generator mode.
In Live/Studio mode, the parameters of each part of the Live/
Studio Set can apply further modification to parameters such as
pan, octave, and filter, relative to the settings specified by the
patch. Thus, Patches in a Live/Studio Set may sound different
than they do when heard in Single mode. To return these
settings to their initial conditions, select the Patch after execute
Factory Reset Temporary for the Live/Studio Set. (p. 280)
The volume level of the instrument connected to Fantom-G is
too low.
Check the following points.
• Could you be using a connection cable that contains a resistor?
Use a connection cable that does not contain a resistor.
• Check the “Input Setting” (p. 258).
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