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[edited]Question asked too fast!
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concert strings II - all keys one octave lower

I was trying to build expression maps for Cubase6 today and stumbled over the key mapping. Everything is mapped an octave lower than it should be. Like smooth articulation on c#0 as instead of c#1 ... in the beginning I thought it was just the keyswitches but the lowest starting note of the violins were a G2, violas C2. I have no midi modifiers or whatsoever activated ? That just seems weird. (Kontakt 5.0.1)

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anterroir wrote:concert strings II - all keys one octave lower

I was trying to build expression maps for Cubase6 today and stumbled over the key mapping. Everything is mapped an octave lower than it should be. Like smooth articulation on c#0 as instead of c#1 ... in the beginning I thought it was just the keyswitches but the lowest starting note of the violins were a G2, violas C2. I have no midi modifiers or whatsoever activated ? That just seems weird. (Kontakt 5.0.1)
you can set the keyswitches to whatever midi note you want (above or below the instruments range, of course) in the SETTINGS menu

it's all relative what the octave is named. the two DAWS i own have middle C named differently

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@anterroir,

Are you saying that all the "note names", for key-switches and playable notes, are one octave adrift? If so, then you might consider setting the Preference / Option in your host (Cubase, I guess) to offset the names.

Or that the Smooth articulation is showing up as C#0 in your host but the playable key ranges are OK?

I have seen different hosts refer to "middle C2 (MID note # 60) as C3, C4 and C5.

Looking at the Frequency Range chart in the Miroslav User Manual,
-- violins are shown as G2 - A6
-- violas are shown as C2 - A5
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kcisANDderit wrote:you can set the keyswitches to whatever midi note you want (above or below the instruments range, of course) in the SETTINGS menu
I think that whatever it is set to, it will be named on a different octave in Concert Strings. offsetting the names in the host is the answer, I believe (as the note naming convention is fixed within the Concert Strings scripts).
Last edited by DarkStar on Tue Jan 03, 2012 4:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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I know they are relative and yes I know about the settings menu.

Let say say I change a keyswitch manually to C2 in the settings menu I still have to play a C1 on the keyboard to trigger it. And thats plain weird as I have no transpose options triggered nor any input transformers active.

---

*edit

yes they are all adrift, it's not a big bummer but maybe other Cubase users can look into that, confirm it and you can state that in the manual :D
Last edited by anterroir on Tue Jan 03, 2012 4:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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^^^^
What is the MIDI note name range (from MIDI note #0 to #127) in your host? THat, I believe, is what needs adjusting.
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DarkStar wrote:^^^^
What is the MIDI note name range (from MIDI note #0 to #127) in your host? THat, I believe, is what needs adjusting.
C-2
Last edited by anterroir on Tue Jan 03, 2012 4:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Set it to -C1 (or C-1) and the names will match up in the host and in Concert Strings.

That's what I've done here (in Reaper)
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*edit* transposing doesn't solve the number problem

Thanks at all :)
Last edited by anterroir on Tue Jan 03, 2012 5:13 pm, edited 4 times in total.

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As stated already midi note names is a convention and every developer (be it sampler dev, daw and alike) choose the offset he likes; what is standard and never change is the note number. In this way, for instance, note number 45 is the same note, the same key switch and the same key command for whatever software you are using :)

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anterroir wrote:It isn't that easy in Cubase but it's working with the Midi Modifier inserted in every track set to transpose one octave. (Shouldn't there be a standard about this)

Thanks at all :)
The problem is: there are several standards.
;)
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EdC wrote:As stated already midi note names is a convention and every developer (be it sampler dev, daw and alike) choose the offset he likes; what is standard and never change is the note number. In this way, for instance, note number 45 is the same note, the same key switch and the same key command for whatever software you are using :)
But then it doesn't make sense to show the hardscripted key names in your plugin <- as in Cubase key number 25 is a C0 opposed to a C1 the KH Kontakt script is showing. That gives you two options - name that in the manual or add a function in the script to change the root note as in it's current state it shows wrong names for some people/daws.

Don't get me wrong here - I don't really want to nitpick but thats the first time in 10 years I stumbled over that matter and it was just confusing at first.
Last edited by anterroir on Tue Jan 03, 2012 5:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Hi Anterroir,
I understand your issue and I agree than this can seem confusing but the problem is not from Kirk but for rules concerning MIDI standards.

If you like you can find a better explanation here :)

http://tomscarff.110mb.com/midi_analyse ... ctaves.htm

cheers

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It's okay, I wrapped my head around all that.

So it would be nice if Kirk can add an option to change the displayed notes according to the root note of the daw - like midi note 0 = insert root here or if that ain't possible just note in the "manual" it that a c#1 displayed is a c#0 in Cubase.

Saves trouble for other Cubase people asking the same question.

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