2009

Table Of Contents
2 Change the Basic Midi Ch slider (in the General section at the lower right) as desired.
Important: Basic Midi Ch works only if the Keyboard Mode parameter (see the next
section) is set to Multi.
When Basic Midi Ch is set to 16, the lower manual receives on channel 1, and the pedal
register on channel 2. When Basic MIDI Ch is set to 15, the lower manual receives on
channel 16, and the pedal register receives on channel 1.
Note: This parameter is useful in live performance situations—notably if you need to
change the MIDI transmit channel of your keyboard, in order to play other sound
generators.
Using a Single-Channel Controller with the EVB3
If you don’t have a master keyboard that allows multi-channel transmission, you can use
a MIDI keyboard that is capable of transmitting on only one MIDI channel. You can use
the EVB3 Split parameters to split the keyboard in order to play upper, lower, and pedal
sounds—in different keyboard zones.
To set the keyboard mode
µ
Click repeatedly on the Keyboard Mode parameter field, at the bottom center of the
interface, until Split is displayed.
Click here to choose the
keyboard mode.
Set the upper and lower
split points here.
You can determine the range of keyboard zones with the UL Split (upper/lower split) and
LP Split (lower/pedal split) parameters, in conjunction with the Set buttons.
To set the keyboard zone, do one of the following
µ
Click the appropriate Set button (it will turn orange), and press the desired note (the split
point) on your MIDI keyboard.
µ
Drag the value field.
If you select the same value for both split points, the lower manual is turned off. If the LP
Split is set to a value above the UL Split, the other split point is moved (and vice versa).
Transposing the EVB3 by Octaves
You can use the Trans UM, Trans LM, or Trans Ped pop-up menus to individually transpose
the Upper, Lower, and Pedal registers up or down one or two octaves.
171Chapter 7 EVB3