The Loop Page - Kurzweil K2600 Musician's Manual

Kurzweil k2600: user guide
Hide thumbs Also See for K2600:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

is above its halfway point.) The Alt can be set before, after, or at the same point as the Start or
End.
If you set the Alt after the End, you can extend the play of looped samples. Normally, looped
samples will play through to the End, then will loop back to the Loop point, and continue
looping like this until the note is released, when they go into their normal release. If the Alt is set
after the End, looped samples will loop in the same way while notes are sustained. As soon as
you release the notes, however, the samples will play through to the Alt point before going into
release.
The Loop (L) parameter sets the beginning of the looped portion of the current sample.
Although you can adjust this parameter while youÕre on the TRIM page, youÕll normally want to
adjust it while viewing the LOOP page, so you can see the loop transition points, enabling you
to create as smooth a loop as possible. The Loop can be set at any point before the End, including
before the Start and Alt. If you try to move it after the End, the End will move with it.
The End (E) parameter sets the point at which the current sample will stop playback. Typically
youÕll use this parameter to trim unwanted silence off the end of a sample, although you can use
it to shorten a sample as much as you want.
If you want to truncate a sample to save memory, there are two points to keep in mind. First, if
the Alt parameter is set before the Start, you wonÕt save any memory by truncating the Start.
Likewise, you wonÕt save memory by truncating the End if the Alt is set after the End. You wonÕt
reclaim memory by truncating a sample until you save the sample and exit the Sample Editor.
You can also use the Truncate DSP function to automatically truncate your samples at a speciÞed
noise ßoor. As with the TRIM page, youÕll recover memory after saving the sample and exiting
the Sample Editor.

The LOOP Page

The LOOP page features the same four parameters as the TRIM page, but the waveform display
is quite different. The best way to understand what you see on the LOOP page is to switch back
and forth between the TRIM and LOOP pages and study the waveform displays.
EditRamSample:LOOP|Zoom=1/256|||||||||||
S:2.530|||A:2.530|||L:4.267|||E:6.000|||
VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV
-6dB>|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
****************************************
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
<more|||MISC|||TRIM|||LOOP|||DSP|||more>
On the TRIM page you see the entire waveformÑor as much of the waveform as your current
zoom setting allows. When you move to the LOOP page, youÕll notice that the page is split into
two sections, left and right, divided by a vertical bar in the center. This bar is thicker than the
vertical lines representing the Start, Alt, Loop, and End points, and does not move when you
adjust any of these points.
To the left of the dividing bar you see the same segment of the current sample that you see on
the TRIM page. The four vertical lines representing the Start (S), Alt (A), Loop (L), and End (E)
points are visible. (Remember, youÕll see all four vertical lines only if the values for the Start, Alt,
Sampling and Sample Editing
Editing Samples
14-17

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

K2600sK2600xK2600xsK2600rK2600rsK2600 aes

Table of Contents