About Patches And Performances; What Is A Patch; What Is A Performance - Roland XV-5050 Owner's Manual

64 voices 2x expansion sound generator
Hide thumbs Also See for XV-5050:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

About Patches and Performances

On the XV-5050, sounds are organized according to units called Tones, Patches,
Rhythm Sets, and Performances. This section describes the relationship between
a Patch and a Performance.

What Is a Patch?

The type of sound most commonly played on the XV-5050 is called a Patch. A Patch
is a combination of Tones, which are the smallest units of sound. Each Patch can
contain up to four Tones. If we use the analogy of an orchestra, then Patches are the
musical instruments of the performers.
* For information on Tones, see p. 38.
fig.1-01.e
* You can turn the Tones in a Patch on or off. Only Tones that are turned on are heard when
you play the Patch (p. 39).

What Is a Performance?

It may be easiest to think of a Performance as being the orchestra itself.
To continue the orchestra analogy, a Performance is made up of the parts assigned
to the respective instruments (called, naturally enough, "Parts"). You can enjoy
ensemble play by combining a total of 16 Patches or Rhythm Sets into one such Part.
fig.Performance.e
Performance
In other words, a Performance allows you to produce sixteen separate sounds with
a single XV-5050.
If You're Playing Back Song Data Using an External MIDI
Instrument or Sequencing Program
On the XV-5050, press [PERFORM] so its indicator lights, change to the Performance
mode, then start playback of the song data.
* The Patch mode is selected by default. Please be aware that if you try to play song data while
in the Patch mode, only the sound of one Part is played.
36
Tone
Tone
Tone
Tone
1
2
3
4
Part 16
Part11
Patch/
Rhythm set
Part 10
Patch/
Rhythm set
Part 9
Part 1
Patch/
Rhythm set

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents