User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- 1 Voices
- Selecting MegaVoice, GM, XG, and GM2 voices
- Changing Detailed Settings for Metronome or Tap Tempo
- Making Detailed Settings for Harmony/Arpeggio
- Pitch-Related Settings
- Using the LIVE CONTROL Knobs
- Editing Voices (Voice Set)
- Changing Detailed Voice Settings (Touch Response, Mono/Poly, Arpeggio)
- Disabling Automatic Selection of Voice Sets (Effects, etc.)
- Adding New Contents—Expansion Packs
- 2 Styles
- 3 Songs
- Editing Music Notation (Score) Settings
- Editing Lyrics/Text Display Settings
- Playing while Canceling a Particular Part of a Song
- Using the Auto Accompaniment Features with Song Playback
- Song Playback Related Parameters (Guide Function, Channel settings, Repeat settings)
- Creating/Editing Songs (Song Creator)
- 4 USB Audio Player/Recorder
- 5 Microphone
- 6 Multi Pads
- 7 Registration Memory
- 8 Mixer
- 9 Connections
- 10 Function (Menu)
- Index
44 PSR-SX600 Reference Manual
2
Styles
Making Style File Format Settings (Parameter)
The Style File Format (SFF) combines all of Yamaha’s auto accompaniment (Style playback) know-how into
a single unified format. Setting the SFF related parameters determines how the original notes are converted to
the actual sounded notes based on the chord you specify in the Chord area of the keyboard. The conversion
flow is shown below.
The instructions below apply to step 6 of the Basic Procedure on page 36.
NOTE The parameters you can set here are compatible with the SFF GE format. This is why the Style files created on this instrument can be played back only on
instruments which are compatible with SFF GE.
1 In the Parameter page, use the Cursor buttons [][] to select the edit menu.
For details of the edit menu, see page 45.
Set these parameters
before recording the
Source Pattern.
Set these parameters after
recording the Source
Pattern.
Source Pattern settings
• Source Root
• Source Chord
Determines which key you play (Source Root) and which chord type
you use (Source Chord).
Note Conversion from the Source Pattern
• NTR (Conversion via Chord Root change) …page 45
• NTT (Conversion via Chord Type change) … page 45
Chord changes during normal performance
Octave Setting of the Converted Notes
• High Key (Upper octave limit of Note Transposition)
• Note Limit (Note range between the highest and lowest notes)
Others
• RTR (How the note pitch changes in response to chord changes)
Actual Sounded Notes
23
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