best way to create new styles?
Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
best way to create new styles?
I use custom styles on my PA500 for live performances. I'm currently using Sonar & Kat2000 building each track & variation individually. This is very labor intensive.... There has got to be a more user friendly and intuitive way. Just wondering what others are doing?
- Thoraldus
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 2061
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 8:35 am
- Location: Rocky Mountains - SE IDaho
Re: best way to create new styles?
I had the PA500 then I bought the PA600 to do just this thing, import/create styles using midi with markers.Tenortim wrote:I use custom styles on my PA500 for live performances. I'm currently using Sonar & Kat2000 building each track & variation individually. This is very labor intensive.... There has got to be a more user friendly and intuitive way. Just wondering what others are doing?
<i>”It’s easy to play any musical instrument: all you have to do is touch the right key at the right time and the instrument will play itself.”
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
- Thoraldus
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 2061
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 8:35 am
- Location: Rocky Mountains - SE IDaho
The PA600 allows you to import the entire style structure in one file using midi markers to identify the separate style elements. So you can work on your style in a DAW and once you have all the Intros, Variations, Breaks, Fills & Endings defined you can import the whole style in one step via a midi file. Very efficient!Tenortim wrote:Please elaborate on how the 600 makes producing custom styles easier than the 500... Thanks!
<i>”It’s easy to play any musical instrument: all you have to do is touch the right key at the right time and the instrument will play itself.”
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
Thanks for the info. So you are able to export directly from a DAW to the PA600? No conversation software like KAT2000 required? I'm currently using Cakewalk Sonar. But have to export the style files into KAT2000 to convert from Midi format 1 to a .sty file.Thoraldus wrote:The PA600 allows you to import the entire style structure in one file using midi markers to identify the separate style elements. So you can work on your style in a DAW and once you have all the Intros, Variations, Breaks, Fills & Endings defined you can import the whole style in one step via a midi file. Very efficient!Tenortim wrote:Please elaborate on how the 600 makes producing custom styles easier than the 500... Thanks!
- Thoraldus
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 2061
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 8:35 am
- Location: Rocky Mountains - SE IDaho
I also use Cakewalk Sonar Artist. No conversion needed just Save As Format 0 midi. Here's a simple example of a midi created with Sonar with markers that can be directly imported into the PA600 Style Editor to create a style.Tenortim wrote:Thanks for the info. So you are able to export directly from a DAW to the PA600? No conversation software like KAT2000 required? I'm currently using Cakewalk Sonar. But have to export the style files into KAT2000 to convert from Midi format 1 to a .sty file.Thoraldus wrote:The PA600 allows you to import the entire style structure in one file using midi markers to identify the separate style elements. So you can work on your style in a DAW and once you have all the Intros, Variations, Breaks, Fills & Endings defined you can import the whole style in one step via a midi file. Very efficient!Tenortim wrote:Please elaborate on how the 600 makes producing custom styles easier than the 500... Thanks!
<i>”It’s easy to play any musical instrument: all you have to do is touch the right key at the right time and the instrument will play itself.”
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
- Thoraldus
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 2061
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 8:35 am
- Location: Rocky Mountains - SE IDaho
Actually, I use an INS file to define ALL the PA600 instruments in my Cakewalk DAW. When I audition the styles elements in the DAW I hear it EXACTLY how it will sound on the PA600.ANDRZEJP wrote:best way...? press record button on your korg (at start read instruction
"record style").Any computer program or"midi'file"do not do it as if you wanted.
<i>”It’s easy to play any musical instrument: all you have to do is touch the right key at the right time and the instrument will play itself.”
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar
<br>Johann Sebastian Bach
</i>
----------------------------------------------
Rick Stirling - Retired Electrical Engineer - Erstwhile Photographer
Korg Kronos2, Casio MZ-X500, PA600, AKAI MPD32, M-Audio Oxygen 25, ZOOM H6, Cakewalk Sonar