User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- Contents
- Main Features
- USING THE UNIT SAFELY
- Important Notes
- Names of Things and What They Do
- Before You Play
- Listening to Songs
- Performing
- Performing with a Variety of Sounds
- Simulating the Way that Sounds are Created on an Organ (Tone Wheel)
- Performing with Two Layered Tones (Dual Play)
- Performing with Different Tones in the Left and Right Sides of the Keyboard (Split Play)
- Changing the Volume Balance for Dual Play and Split Play
- Adjusting the Keyboard Sensitivity (Key Touch)
- Adding Reverberation to Sounds (Reverb Effect)
- Adding a Variety Effects to the Sound (Effects)
- Adding a Spinning Sound to Organ Tones (Rotary Effect)
- Transposing the Key of the Keyboard or Song Playback (Transpose)
- Performing with the Metronome
- Adding Liveliness to the Sound (Sound Control)
- Changing the Tonal Quality (Equalizer)
- Performing with Audio Files (Audio Key)
- Creating a Piano Sound to Your Taste (Piano Designer)
- Playing Along with Rhythms
- What is Session Partner?
- Performing Along with Session Partner
- Selecting a Rhythm
- Changing a Rhythm’s Tempo
- Selecting a Rhythm’s Chord Progression
- Performing with the Chord Progression Specified in the Left Hand (Chord Progression Off)
- Changing the Rhythm Pattern (Original/Variation)
- Recording the Chord Progression
- Saving Your Favorite Performance Settings
- Recording
- Saving a Performance
- Various Settings
- Connecting Other Equipment
- Appendices
53
Performing
The transpose setting will return to “0” when you select another song.
Example: Playing a Song in the Key of E Major After Transposition to C
Major
Hold down the [Transpose] button and press the E key (since E is the keynote).
Counting from C as a reference point, one moves up four keys, including the black keys, to reach
E, thus “+4” appears in the display.
fig.d-4.eps/fig.Transpose.eps
NOTE
If you play C E G It will sound E G
#
B
FP-7-e.book 53 ページ 2007年7月12日 木曜日 午後3時47分