Kurzweil K2700 Musician's Manual page 259

Hide thumbs Also See for K2700:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Multi Edit Mode
RIFF Page
With Release Type set to None, your riff will stop playing as soon as it is released. It will not
sync to anything. With Release Type set to Down Beat, if there is already something playing
to sync to, the current riff will wait for the down beat of the next measure before stopping
when released; so, you can trigger the riff to stop ahead of time, and have it stop in sync at
the down beat of the next measure. With Release Type set to Any Beat, if there is already a
something playing to sync to, the riff will wait only until the next beat before stopping when
released. Depending on when you release the riff it will stop in sync with a beat, but it may
be on an up beat or a down beat.
With Release Type set to Down Beat Wait, the riff will wait for the down beat of the next
measure to stop when released. The difference from Down Beat is that if there is nothing
playing to sync to, the riff wont stop when released. If another riff is already running, Down
Beat Wait behaves just like Down Beat.
With Release Type set to Any Beat Wait, if there is already a something playing to sync to,
the riff will wait for the next beat before releasing. The difference from Any Beat is that if
there is nothing playing to sync to, this riff will not stop when released. This can be useful
if you want to stop a riff in sync only when another riff is playing. If something is already
playing to sync to, Any Beat Wait behaves just like Any Beat.
With Release Type set to Loop, if there is already a riff or song playing to sync to, the current
riff will wait for the playing riff or song to restart its loop (if Loop is set to On) before
starting (see
songs). This way you can release the riff to stop ahead of time, and have it stop in sync at the
start of the playing riff or song's loop.
With Release Type set to Stop, if there is already something playing to sync to, the current
riff will wait for what is playing to stop before releasing. This way you can trigger the current
riff to release ahead of time, and have it stop in sync at the release (stopping) of the riff,
arpeggiator, or song that you are syncing to. If there is nothing playing to sync to, the riff will
stop immediately.
With Release Type set to Start Wait, if there is nothing playing to sync to, the current riff
will wait for something it can sync to to begin playing first before releasing. This is similar to
Down Beat Wait, but it will only release the riff the first time that whatever it is syncing to
starts. This way you can trigger the riff to stop ahead of time, and have it stop in sync at the
start of the riff, arpeggiator, or song that you are syncing to. If you restart the riff and try to
release it again while the thing you are syncing to is already playing, Start Wait will not stop
the riff.
With Release Type set to Loop Wait, if there is already a riff or song playing to sync to, the
current riff will wait for the playing riff or song to restart its loop (if Loop is set to On) before
starting (see
songs). This way you can trigger the riff to stop ahead of time, and have it stop in sync at the
start of the playing riff or song's loop. The difference from Loop is that if there is nothing
playing to sync to, the riff will not stop when released. If the riff or song that you are syncing
to is already running, Loop Wait behaves just like Loop.
7-36
"Loop" on page 7-33
for looping riffs, and
"Loop" on page 7-33
for looping riffs, and
"Loop" on page 8-11
for looping
"Loop" on page 8-11
for looping

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents