Yamaha PSR-SX600 Reference Manual page 47

Hide thumbs Also See for PSR-SX600:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

When NTR is set to Guitar
All-Purpose
Stroke
Arpeggio
3 High Key/Note Limit
The settings here adjust the Octave of the notes converted from the original ones through NTT and NTR.
[4 ]/
High Key
[5 ]
[6 ]
Note Limit Low
[7 ]
Note Limit High
4 RTR (Retrigger Rule)
These settings determine whether notes stop sounding or not and how they change pitch in response to
chord changes. Use the Cursor buttons [4 ]–[7 ] to select one of the following types.
Stop
Pitch Shift
Pitch Shift To Root
Retrigger
Retrigger To Root
This table covers both stroke- and arpeggio-played sounds.
Suitable for strumming sounds of the guitar. Some notes may sound as if they are
muted—this is the normal condition when chords are played on guitar by strum-
ming.
Suitable for arpeggio-played sound of the guitar, resulting in beautiful four-note
arpeggio sounds.
This sets the highest key (upper octave limit) of the note transposition for the
chord root change. Any notes calculated to be higher than the highest key are
transposed down to the next lowest octave. This setting is available only when the
NTR parameter
(page
46) is set to "Root Transpose."
Example—When the highest key is F.
Root changes
Notes played
These set the note range (highest and lowest notes) for Voices recorded to the
Style channels. By judicious setting of this range, you can ensure that the Voices
sound as realistic as possible—in other words, that no notes outside the natural
range are sounded (e.g., high bass sounds or low piccolo sounds).
Example—When the lowest note is C3 and the highest is D4.
Root changes
Notes played
The notes stop sounding.
The pitch of the note will bend without a new attack to match the type of the new chord.
The pitch of the note will bend without a new attack to match the root of the new chord.
However, the octave of the new note remains the same.
The note is retriggered with a new attack at a new pitch corresponding to the next chord.
The note is retriggered with a new attack at the root note of the next chord. However, the
octave of the new note remains the same.
PSR-SX600 Reference Manual
2
High Limit
Low Limit
47

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents

Save PDF