User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Important notes
- Features
- Contents
- Panel description
- Shortcut list
- Before you start using the BK5OR
- Connecting the AC adaptor
- Connecting the BK5OR to an amplifier, mixer, etc.
- Connecting a MIDI device
- Connecting the BK5OR to your computer
- Connecting a television set
- Connecting an optional footswitch, hold pedal or expression pedal
- Connecting a portable audio player
- Listening through headphones
- Installing the music rest
- Turning the power on/off
- Demo of the BK5OR
- Basic operation of the BK5OR
- Playing the BK5OR’s real-time parts
- Rhythm functions
- Using the BK5OR as a USB player
- Getting ready to use the BK5OR as a USB player
- Selecting a song or rhythm on a USB memory
- Playing back a song or rhythm from a USB memory
- Renaming or deleting files/folders on a USB memory
- Using the ‘Search’ function to locate songs, rhythms or pictures
- Activating the ‘Play All Songs’ parameter for the USBmemory
- Loop function (MARK A/B)
- Other important functions
- Performance Lists
- Performance/Music Assistant/ Factory Songs info
- Loading a Performance/‘Music Assistant’/‘Factory Songs’ List
- Recalling a Performance/‘Music Assistant’/‘FactorySongs’memory
- Quickly locating Performance memories
- Saving your settings as a Performance
- Other Performance List functions
- Editing Performance memories
- Adding pictures to the music
- Recording your performance as audio data
- Lock functions
- Menu options
- General procedure
- Internal Lyrics
- ‘Performance Edit’ parameters
- ‘Tone Part View’ parameters
- Tone
- Volume
- Reverb Send
- Chorus Send
- Panpot
- Key Touch (velocity sensitivity)
- Eq Part Edit
- Mfx
- Expression Pedal
- Pedal Exp Down/Up
- Hold Pedal
- Octave Shift
- Coarse Tune
- Fine Tune
- Portamento Mode
- Portamento Time
- Bender Assign
- Bender Range
- Modulation Assign
- Cut Off
- Resonance
- Attack (only for Tones)
- Decay
- Release
- Vibrato Rate
- Vibrato Depth
- Vibrato Delay
- C1
- ‘Tone Part MFX’ parameters
- ‘Rhythm Parts’ parameters
- Split
- Scale Tune Switch
- Scale Tune
- Key
- ‘Arranger Setting’ parameters
- ‘Melody Intelligent’ parameters
- Save As Default
- ‘Tone Part View’ parameters
- ‘Global’ parameters
- Mastering Tools
- Makeup Tools (rhythms and SMF)
- Rhythm Composer (programming your own rhythms)
- Clearing the RAM memory (Initialize Rhythm)
- Getting ready for the first track
- Recording a rhythm pattern
- Auditioning your rhythm and adding more tracks
- Saving your rhythm
- Recording other tracks and divisions
- Help function on the main Rhythm Composer page
- Muting tracks while recording others
- Solo
- Rhythm Track Edit functions
- Editing individual rhythm events (Micro Edit)
- MIDI parameters
- Factory Reset
- Formatting a USB memory
- Visual Control function
- Troubleshooting
- Specifications
- MIDI Implementation Chart
- Chord Intelligence
- Index
Menu options
100
r
Backing Keyboard BK-5 OR
Press the [WRITE] button (its indicator flashes) to
confirm your settings and edit the data.
■ Shift Clock
“Shift Clock” allows you to shift the notes within the
selected “From”/“To” range. It can be used for two
things:
•To correct “slow” notes due to a slow(er) attack.
You may want to use “Shift Clock” after assigning a
sound to a track that has a considerably slower
attack than the sound you used for recording the
part in question. This technique is frequently used in
pop music to “time” 1/16-note string arpeggios
played with a “slow” pad sound. Rather than have the
notes begin at the mathematically correct time (e.g.
2-1-0), you could shift them to the left (e.g. to 1-4-
115), so that the peak volume of the attack is reached
on the next beat:
•To correct the timing of notes recorded via MIDI
without quantizing them.
You can use external sequences as raw material for
your songs. Recording such excerpts via MIDI may
cause a slight delay (e.g. 5 CPT). If that is not accept-
able, use “Shift Clock” to “push” the recorded data to
the left (select “–5”). That allows you to preserve any
irregularities the original may contain because it was
not quantized. After selecting a sound with a slow
release (i.e. a sound that lingers on after all notes
have been released), however, “Change Gate Time”
will help you cut the notes down to size and thus
avoid undesirable overlaps.
Nearest**: Refers to a
more musical system
for real-time shifts of
the recorded rhythm
notes during Arranger
playback.
Degree: This setting
refers to the “old” sys-
tem for real-time con-
version of track
information during
rhythm playback. See
page 104.
Select “---” if the
selected pattern
should ignore this set-
ting.
From/To…
CC00,
CC32,
PC
---, 0~127,
ALL
1~128
Enter the original data
value (i.e. the value
that is being used right
now by the selected
track(s)) for “From”. For
“To”, specify the new
value that should
replace the “From”
value. These are what
we call “absolute”
changes: you don’t add
or subtract values, you
replace them with
other values. This sys-
tem is only available
for messages that
allow you to select
sounds or sound
banks.***
Inc/Dec…
Expression,
Reverb,
Chorus,
Panpot
–127~127 These parameters
allow you to add (+) or
subtract (–) a given
value to/from the cur-
rent Expression, Pan,
Reverb Send or Chorus
Send values. This may
come in handy if the
real-time changes you
recorded turn out to
be too high or too low.
[*] This parameter is not available for: ADrums and ABass tracks,
Intro3 & 4 and End3 & 4 patterns.
[**] The notes of the melodic rhythm tracks are compared against
the chords played in the recognition area. If the next chord you
play contains the note the selected part is already sounding
(based on the previous chord), that note is maintained.
If the new chord does not contain that note, the rhythm part in
question uses the closest (“Nearest”) note. This produces a more
musical behavior than any other system on the market.
[***] CC00 messages are the so-called “MSB” bank select messag-
es. They allows you to select the Capital Tone (select “0”) of a
sound address. Select “---” if the current setting must not
change. The CC32 control change is the so-called “LSB” bank se-
lect message. Use the PC parameter to change the address, a.k.a.
program change number, of a sound (e.g. from “1” to “2”).
Parameter Setting Explanation
Parameter Setting Explanation
Track ADrums~Acc6,
ALL
Allows you to select
the track you wish to
edit. You can also
select “ALL” here, in
which case the opera-
tion applies to all
tracks.
Mode Major, Minor,
7th
Allows you to select
the Mode to be edited.
Original positions (slow attack, tim-
ing seems off)
Shift= –5
(timing sounds OK)
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