Program Mode
The Program Editor
Keymap
Assign a keymap from ROM to the current layer. Keymaps are collections of samples assigned
to note and velocity ranges.
Transpose (Xpose)
Transpose the current keymap up as much as 127 semitones (ten octaves and a perfect fifth) or
down as much as 128 semitones (ten octaves and a minor sixth).
Key Tracking (KeyTrk)
This is one of the six common DSP control parameters. On the KEYMAP page, key tracking
affects the interval between notes. The default value of 100 cents (a cent is a hundredth of a
semitone) gives you the normal semitone interval between each note. Higher values increase the
interval; lower values decrease it. Negative values will cause the pitch to decrease as you play
higher notes.
When you make changes to this parameter, you'll need to keep in mind that KeyTrk on the
KEYMAP page works in conjunction with KeyTrk on the PITCH page. Therefore, you'll need to
check the KeyTrk value on both pages to see how key tracking works within a program. Unless
you're looking for nonstandard note intervals, the values of the KeyTrk parameters on the
PITCH and KEYMAP pages should add up to 100 cents.
Velocity Tracking (VelTrk)
This is another common DSP control parameter. As with the other parameters on the KEYMAP
page, this shifts the position of the keymap. Different attack velocities will play different pitch
shifts of the sample root assigned to that note range. If the shift is great enough, the next higher
or lower sample root will be played, which in some cases (many drum programs, for example)
will play an entirely different sound. Positive values will play higher pitches of the sample root
when you use hard attack velocities (they shift the keymap downward), while negative values
will play lower pitches.
Method (AltMethod)
See Alternative Switch (AltControl and AltMethod) below.
Stereo
You'll use this parameter when you're working with stereo samples.
When you set this parameter to On, the KEYMAP page changes slightly:
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