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
73
Playing Along with Rhythms
Performing with the keyboard divided at a certain key into a left side and a right side is
called “Split Play.” While in Split Play, you can use the left side to specify chords instead
of using it to play the Lower Tone.
When specifying the chords in the left part of the keyboard, Dual Play (p. 41) is
disabled in the right part.
fig.Panel-Session-4.eps
1.
Press the [Session Partner] button so Session Partner starts playing.
2.
Press the Track [2] button so its light is turned off.
The [Split] button lights up.
The left side of the keyboard will no longer produce sound.
3.
Use the left side of the keyboard to specify a chord, and play a melody in
the right side.
fig.ChordProgOff.eps
It is not necessary to continue holding down the keys for chords in the left side. Even after you
release the key, the same chord continues until the next chord is played.
You can specify chords simply with your finger, even without playing the keys for all
the chords’ constituent notes. For more information about chord fingering, refer to the
“Chord Fingering List” (p. 167).
Performing with the Chord Progression Specified in the Left Hand
(Chord Progression Off)
NOTE
Split Point * You can change the split point.
Region for specifying chords
C1 B1 B6A0 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8
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