Do you mean learn CC? it does...right click on whatever parameter you want to control.Does BBCSO pro SF app allow midi learn ?
Do you mean learn CC? it does...right click on whatever parameter you want to control.Does BBCSO pro SF app allow midi learn ?
Means you can layer more than one instrument within the player...like you can with Kontakt...I can have up to 16 MIDI channels all within ONE instance. Can't do that with SF player yet.What does this means specifically?
I’ll try that, thanks.no sorry...can't be removed, but you can temporarily disable it if you hold the sustain pedal down...That's what they told me. Or write it into automation so you don't have to worry about it.
Means you can layer more than one instrument within the player...like you can with Kontakt...I can have up to 16 MIDI channels all within ONE instance. Can't do that with SF player yet.
That sounds cool.I use Presonus Studio One Pro 5, which has the Multi-Instrument feature. You can just drag a second, instrument onto the existing one, and it creates a combo of both instruments in one track, need a third one, just drag a third instrument to the first two, ...etc. You can even process them independently in the same track.
yeah that's a super tasty feature in S1 5I use Presonus Studio One Pro 5, which has the Multi-Instrument feature. You can just drag a second, instrument onto the existing one, and it creates a combo of both instruments in one track, need a third one, just drag a third instrument to the first two, ...etc. You can even process them independently in the same track.
You could also use Blue Cat's Patchwork or PluginGuru Unify to make multitimbral instances.
Is it just me or is it really hard to get a good double-tonguing...
Which daw are you using
That would make sense since it's off by an octave in PT...hope they fix this.
Studio OneWhich daw are you using
Ok well studio one is the same as Cubase and considers middle c to be c3, spitfire follow the industry standard of c4Studio One
C4 is the standard, yes...I think with most if not all DAWs, they follow the less popular c3...however, in Pro Tools, I can change this behavior to adjust to the standard C4. So works out for me.Ok well studio one is the same as Cubase and considers middle c to be c3, spitfire follow the industry standard of c4
LOL @jaketanner i know your sorted i was meaning for @macavalon thats why he key switches are out by an octave there is nothing wrong with the plugin or in reality the DAW they just both follow a different standard. Ideally like PT you should be able to tell the DAW which standard you want to follow or there should be a way in the VST spec the DAW and the plugin to say which standard they follow and the translation be automatic.C4 is the standard, yes...I think with most if not all DAWs, they follow the less popular c3...however, in Pro Tools, I can change this behavior to adjust to the standard C4. So works out for me.
A quick button to change setting would be nice.LOL @jaketanner i know your sorted i was meaning for @macavalon thats why he key switches are out by an octave there is nothing wrong with the plugin or in reality the DAW they just both follow a different standard. Ideally like PT you should be able to tell the DAW which standard you want to follow or there should be a way in the VST spec the DAW and the plugin to say which standard they follow and the translation be automatic.
I must admit I thought it was a bug after comparing my bbcso keyswitch setup vs my 8dio keyswitch setup. It's an easy thing to work aroundA quick button to change setting would be nice.