On Sun, 2014-11-09 at 18:22 +0100, Andreas Schneider wrote: > As entering the pitches I think you meant rhythms/durations? > first is the recommended procedure, I mostly use > it as well. Though once I get my script working, I will try another > workflow where I enter durations and pitches simultaneously -- with one > hand on the keys (for the pitch) and one hand on the trigger pads of my > master keyboard (for the duration). > For changing notes in a chord (which I often do while arranging), I do > not know a good way. When I press a key on the MIDI keyboard while > holding the alt key on the PC keyboard, a note is added, but I cannot > remove a note of the chord that way. (I would expect that pressing the > key of a note that is already present in the chord would delete it, but > in fact the note in inserted a second time into the chord.) So in 90% of > the cases I fall back to removing the chord and re-entering the changed > one, but that is not very efficient. Is there something I am missing?
I don't think so, I haven't done anything much with entering chords or editing them via MIDI controller :( > The easiest way I can think of would be to be able to edit a chord while > holding the sustain pedal, i.e. pressing a key would add or remove a > note of the chord depending on whether it is already present in the chord. Well a MIDI filter could certainly do that but someone would have to write it. I guess the built-in code could (perhaps) switch to deleting if the note is already present - I'll take a look at that. Richard > > Andreas > > > Am 09.11.2014 um 14:11 schrieb Ellen Schwindt: > > To clarify about the pedal question: > > > > I usually enter durations in one pass through a phrase or section, then > > go back and enter pitches. When I get to chords, I use the pedal to > > enter all the notes of a chord simultaneously--and this is very useful. > > I wish that the cursor would advance only one note after entering the > > chord so I could simply enter the next chord using the same method. > > Instead I have to arrow back to get the cursor on the right chord. I'd > > be interested in other people's uses of that feature. > > > > and thanks for the phrasing info--that was helpful. > > -Ellen > > > _______________________________________________ > Denemo-devel mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel _______________________________________________ Denemo-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/denemo-devel
