User manual

Table Of Contents
20
Setting up your system
Setting up MIDI
If you want to use even more instruments for playback, simply connect MIDI Thru on
the sound module to MIDI In on the next instrument, and so on. In this hook-up, you
will always play the first keyboard when recording. But you can still use all your
devices for providing sounds on playback.
Setting MIDI Thru and Local On/Off
On the MIDI page in the Preferences dialog (located on the File menu under Windows
and on the Cubase menu under Mac OS X), you will find a setting called “MIDI Thru
Active”. This is related to a setting in your instrument called “Local On/Off” or “Local
Control On/Off”.
- If you use a MIDI keyboard instrument, as described earlier in this chapter, MIDI
Thru should be activated and that instrument should be set to Local Off
(sometimes called Local Control Off – see the instrument’s operation manual for
details). The MIDI signal from the keyboard will be recorded in Cubase and at the
same time be re-routed back to the instrument so that you hear what you are
playing, without the keyboard “triggering” its own sounds.
- If you use a separate MIDI keyboard – one that does not produce any sounds
itself
– MIDI Thru in Cubase should also be activated, but you don’t need to look
for any Local On/Off setting in your instruments.
- The only case where MIDI Thru should be deactivated is if you use Cubase with
only one keyboard instrument and that instrument cannot be set to Local Off
mode.
- MIDI Thru will be active only for MIDI tracks that are record enabled and/or have
the Monitor button activated. See the chapter
“Recording” on page 110 for more
information.
!
If you plan to use more than three sound sources, we recommend that you either use
an interface with more than one output, or a separate MIDI Thru box instead of the
Thru jacks on each unit.
When “MIDI Thru” is active in Cubase, MIDI
data received is immediately “echoed” back out.
When you press a key, it is sent out via MIDI to
Cubase.
MIDI data coming in to the instrument is
played by the “Synth” inside it.
When Local Control is turned on in the
instrument, the keys you press will be played
by the “Synth” inside the instrument. When
Local Control is turned off, this connection is
cut off.
“Synth”