Smooth Sound Transition...

Discussion relating to the Korg Kronos Workstation.

Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever

GrandMasterKorg
Junior Member
Posts: 60
Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2014 11:50 am

Smooth Sound Transition...

Post by GrandMasterKorg »

The smooth sound transition is not working perfect...

Say, I play a single key for example C1 from a program and then I keep the key C1 pressed and the program therefore sounding, while I hit the INC button. The program is still sounding, because it is for example a pad sound with a lot of action ongoing, maybe it's a wave sequence with aftertouch. So while I control the sound via aftertouch I can for example modulate the filter. Note that in the moment the program is not anymore active, because I chose the neighbor program, which is, let's say a monophonic lead sound. Now I can play some lead hooks.

I still have the key C1 down and the wave sequence sounding. But now, if I hit the INC button again, to change to a new sound, the wave sequence is abruptly stopped.

And this is something what I really don't like. I think the voices should be played as long as the key is pressed. I think the software should be able to do this. There are 200 independent voices and every voice should be able to play a single dedicated program.

So for my understanding, the smooth sound transition is not keeping the promises.
BillW
Platinum Member
Posts: 933
Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2005 2:22 pm
Location: Northern Virginia

Post by BillW »

SST only supports ONE change. If you play a note on patch A and then switch to patch B, the sound from A will continue to play. Once you switch to C, the sound from A will stop.
Korg Kronos 61 (2); Kurzweil PC4; Casio Privia PX-350m; Macbook Pro
User avatar
ferchis
Platinum Member
Posts: 558
Joined: Fri Mar 30, 2007 4:17 am
Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina

Post by ferchis »

BillW wrote:SST only supports ONE change. If you play a note on patch A and then switch to patch B, the sound from A will continue to play. Once you switch to C, the sound from A will stop.
+1

I think you got the SST wrong...
Fernando
Music IS EnTeRtAiNmEnT

Kronos 88 - Korg M50 61 - Morphwiz - Alchemy synth
User avatar
danatkorg
Product Manager, Korg R&D
Posts: 4205
Joined: Fri Jan 21, 2005 7:28 am
Location: California, USA
Contact:

Post by danatkorg »

From the introduction to the Smooth Sound Transitions section in the Operation Guide (do check out the manuals - they will be helpful!):

"SST works between two sounds at a time: the current sound and the previous sound. If you select a new sound while two older sounds are still overlapping, the oldest sound stops."
Dan Phillips
Manager of Product Development, Korg R&D
Personal website: www.danphillips.com
For technical support, please contact your Korg Distributor: http://www.korg.co.jp/English/Distributors/
Regretfully, I cannot offer technical support directly.
If you need to contact me for purposes other than technical support, please do not send PMs; instead, send email to dan@korgrd.com
GrandMasterKorg
Junior Member
Posts: 60
Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2014 11:50 am

Post by GrandMasterKorg »

This all may be right, but I tell you what I expect from the smooth sound transition. In my opinion there is space for improvement.

Because the way I work, is, to choose a program and press the key down to keep it sounding and then I go on to switch trough the next sounds to find a sound that matches to the first continuously sounding sound.

But with the current SST this is not possible. My Access Virus TI1 can do it. The voices are completely independent, each of the voices can play it's dedicated program.

But neverheless, for the future, Korg should work on it, because the situation happens very often, that the second sound is not the right one and you have to change again, but you need the first sound playing.
danatkorg wrote: "SST works between two sounds at a time: the current sound and the previous sound. If you select a new sound while two older sounds are still overlapping, the oldest sound stops."
And by the way, the sounds I am talking about are not still overlapping. Only the first sound is always sounding, the second one WAS overlapping and then got stopped, because of it's released key and short release time. So the definition is not absolutely correct.

Maybe a software update can bring the SST 2.0 to us?
User avatar
geoelectro
Platinum Member
Posts: 1045
Joined: Fri Sep 14, 2012 2:12 am
Location: Texas
Contact:

Post by geoelectro »

In combi mode you can have your first sound playing as long as you like while changing sounds all you want in the other 15 timbres.

Or plan ahead better. :)

Geo
Kronos 2 61
Synthesizers.com Custom Modular
N.I. Komplete 13, Omnisphere 2, VB-3.
Yamaha P-80 Weighted Keyboard. NanoPad2
User avatar
danatkorg
Product Manager, Korg R&D
Posts: 4205
Joined: Fri Jan 21, 2005 7:28 am
Location: California, USA
Contact:

Post by danatkorg »

I understand the desire for multiple sounds to overlap, rather than simply two. As described in detail in that section of the manuals, the system is set up strictly for two sounds, one old and one new. It's unlikely that will change in the near term.

In general, I would recommend reading that section of the manuals for a better understanding of this part of the system. It's only a few pages.
Dan Phillips
Manager of Product Development, Korg R&D
Personal website: www.danphillips.com
For technical support, please contact your Korg Distributor: http://www.korg.co.jp/English/Distributors/
Regretfully, I cannot offer technical support directly.
If you need to contact me for purposes other than technical support, please do not send PMs; instead, send email to dan@korgrd.com
GrandMasterKorg
Junior Member
Posts: 60
Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2014 11:50 am

Post by GrandMasterKorg »

Anyway, thanks for the explanation.
EvilDragon
Platinum Member
Posts: 1992
Joined: Thu Nov 24, 2005 1:18 pm
Location: Croatia

Post by EvilDragon »

danatkorg wrote:I understand the desire for multiple sounds to overlap, rather than simply two. As described in detail in that section of the manuals, the system is set up strictly for two sounds, one old and one new. It's unlikely that will change in the near term.
How about this logic: we have sound A and sound B. If sound A is still playing after SST (we're now on sound B), and if we change to sound C which happens to be exactly the same sound as sound A, just divert the resources back to sound A instead, don't stop anything.

Basically if I am understanding how Kronos does things, it has 4 cores - one for the sound engines, one for the effects, and a duplicate of that for SST. So, while SST is active, all 4 cores are in full motion. Can't see why it couldn't be made so that if SST cores are active AND you're going back to that same sound running on SST cores, it doesn't stop that sound.
User avatar
danatkorg
Product Manager, Korg R&D
Posts: 4205
Joined: Fri Jan 21, 2005 7:28 am
Location: California, USA
Contact:

Post by danatkorg »

EvilDragon wrote:
danatkorg wrote:I understand the desire for multiple sounds to overlap, rather than simply two. As described in detail in that section of the manuals, the system is set up strictly for two sounds, one old and one new. It's unlikely that will change in the near term.
Basically if I am understanding how Kronos does things, it has 4 cores - one for the sound engines, one for the effects, and a duplicate of that for SST.
That approach would have caused a serious hit to efficiency, wasting half the processing power most of the time! We did something different. Here's a quote from the Performance Meters section of the Parameter Guide:

"Effects CPU
The KRONOS uses multiple CPUs for playing synthesizer voices, and a separate CPU for effects processing including IFX, MFX, and TFX. Note that effects integrated into EXi use the voice CPUs instead, and show up on the meters as EXi fixed resources, as described above."

And, I didn't say that anything *couldn't* happen - just that in the near term it was unlikely.
Dan Phillips
Manager of Product Development, Korg R&D
Personal website: www.danphillips.com
For technical support, please contact your Korg Distributor: http://www.korg.co.jp/English/Distributors/
Regretfully, I cannot offer technical support directly.
If you need to contact me for purposes other than technical support, please do not send PMs; instead, send email to dan@korgrd.com
EvilDragon
Platinum Member
Posts: 1992
Joined: Thu Nov 24, 2005 1:18 pm
Location: Croatia

Post by EvilDragon »

Question raises - what could Kronos have done with a more powerful Atom CPU, say, a quad core Bay Trail-I, or an Avoton octacore? 8) Doubling the polyphony? More insert FX? More SST wizardry? Ehehe. :)
User avatar
Aziz1008
Senior Member
Posts: 344
Joined: Mon Apr 06, 2015 5:51 pm
Location: Russia, Moscow
Contact:

Post by Aziz1008 »

It's strange, but my cheap but handy Roland GW7 also has SST!

Which seems even more powerful than that in Kronos, because when I select Organ and keep the key pressed, then select Strings and keep the key, then select Sax and keep the key, all three sounds continue to sound as long as I keep its keys.
User avatar
danatkorg
Product Manager, Korg R&D
Posts: 4205
Joined: Fri Jan 21, 2005 7:28 am
Location: California, USA
Contact:

Post by danatkorg »

Aziz1008 wrote:It's strange, but my cheap but handy Roland GW7 also has SST!

Which seems even more powerful than that in Kronos, because when I select Organ and keep the key pressed, then select Strings and keep the key, then select Sax and keep the key, all three sounds continue to sound as long as I keep its keys.
But, the effects don't continue - and that's the real trick, and what distinguishes SST.

The OASYS also kept multiple previous sounds going, as you describe. But, as with your Roland, the effects had to change. With the KRONOS, the effects of the previous sound are kept too, so that reverbs and delays don't get cut off, and timbre-altering effects such as distortion, chorus, phasers etc. stay with the sound. That's why we call it SST. That's also why it's limited to two simultaneous sounds.
Dan Phillips
Manager of Product Development, Korg R&D
Personal website: www.danphillips.com
For technical support, please contact your Korg Distributor: http://www.korg.co.jp/English/Distributors/
Regretfully, I cannot offer technical support directly.
If you need to contact me for purposes other than technical support, please do not send PMs; instead, send email to dan@korgrd.com
User avatar
Aziz1008
Senior Member
Posts: 344
Joined: Mon Apr 06, 2015 5:51 pm
Location: Russia, Moscow
Contact:

Post by Aziz1008 »

I see, that's cool thank you.. Though it doesn't matter on this Roland where it more relies upon sample quality itself, so effects are barely used. ))

I've noticed also that Kronos continues to fade away sound even without having its key pressed. That's a great feature.
RichardTRelayer
Posts: 18
Joined: Fri Aug 28, 2015 4:29 pm
Location: Birmingham, UK, Sol III, Milky Way.

Post by RichardTRelayer »

My Alesis QS8 also has SST without the effects continuing. It makes some transitions pretty shocking without planning for similar effects and accidents can be embarassing. By comparison my K88 is much easier to manage and the point about using combi timbres looks promising. I love it but have to remember my sustain pedal is not a magic pedal.
Mega polyphony is taken for granted but polyeffectony could be the feature of the future and kronos SST is a step towards it. Meanwhile could it be possible to transit ABCD while making a setting to allow A to continue through but kill B&C instead?
Apologies if this doesn't make complete sense, long day.
Richard Thomas. In order of appearance:
Roland HP1700, Roland SC55, Bohemia Acoustic, Alesis QS8, RME Babyface, REAPER, Kronos 2-88, RME Digiface USB.
Given up trying to play them, now I just play with them.
Post Reply

Return to “Korg Kronos”