geoelectro wrote:Yesterday I decided to take a sample of my FX-1 organ. I connected the headphone jack of the organ to the two Kronos inputs. I planned to take two samples per octave since organ sounds transpose quite easily.
I deleted the existing (default) MS in the sampler. I set the key range to 6. I set the first recorded note to the first Eb in octave one. Set the level by pressing the Sampling Record button. Then, pressed the organ key down, pressed start/stop under sampling and let it record for about 4 seconds.
Hit create for the next sample and set the root key to the next A in octave one. Took that sample and repeated until the five octave range was covered.
This took about 10 minutes. Then I looped each sample for an additional 30 minutes or so. Saved etc.
It sounds so weird playing the Kronos and hearing the Yamaha FX-1 sound!
Geo
This is pretty much it but misses all of the key details!:roll:
1) DO read through from page 123 in the Operations Manual.
It's worth trying the example in pg 135 just to see how the process works.
2) Start from switch on, or if you have been playing around make sure you switch off and on again to reset the parameters.
3) Decide where you are going to put the samples - my choice was straight into a directory on the HDD to make sure I knew where they were, to simplify loading and make it easy to name them.
From pressing the SAMPLING button you need to click the drop down menu and select the directory to save samples to.
4) Set the input signal levels - in my case I used both inputs so you can follow the examples on page 135, just substitute "save to disk" for "save to RAM".
5) Instead of starting sampling with the SAMPLE START switch I used the THRESHOLD option, which means that you set the SAMPLING RECORD then START STOP buttons and sampling only starts when the incoming signal level hits 20dB, so you get a clean signal start - you press START STOP to stop the sample.
6) Once you have recorded all your samples you can hear them by going to the DISK menu, finding the directory you used to save them and pressing play to hear each one.
7) In my case I needed a multisample, which allows you to set the sample at the right position of the keyboard. So I needed a Multisample with 37 indexes, one for each key I sampled. Follow page 133 of the Ops Manual and assign your samples to the relevant key.
Don't forget to "SAVE ALL" as stated on page 146 or you will lose your Multisample and indexes!

You can now convert the Multisample to a Program as described on page 146 and you will now be able to play your samples on the keyboard!
Remember to save the program!
Roland XP30, Hammond XK3C, SKX;Korg Kronos 73,
GEM Promega 2, Roland AX Synth, Roland Fantom FA76, Roland Fantom XR, Verghese ProSoloist Rack, ARP Prosoloist, Mellotron 4000D, Yamaha CP70B, Yamaha A4000, EMU Proteus Custom
Why Aye Man!
www.losendos.co.uk