User Guide
PC2 Made Easy
77
32. Customizing the Internal Voices Mode
Now that you have learned about various programming techniques for Setups, you might
want to apply some of these things to the Internal Voices mode. Essentially, when you
are in Internal Voices mode, you are playing a single zone setup. So all of the zone
programming parameters apply. For example, you might want to assign a slider to
Tempo Control for the Arpeggiator. This is easily done.
1. Start in Internal Voices mode.
2. Edit any of the parameters found within the MIDI Transmit, Program, Key Range,
Transpose, Velocity, Controllers, and Arpeggiator buttons.
3. Press Store. The display will ask if you want to save a Setup and will pick the first
empty Setup location.
4. Press the Internal Voices. The display now asks if you want to save to Internal Voices.
Press Enter, and you are done.
Since there is only one location for the Internal Voices parameters in memory, any
changes you make using this method will wipe out the defaults that currently exist for
those parameters. But if you Reset the PC2, those defaults will return. You can reset the
PC2 from the Global Menu.
DonÕt confuse the Internal Voices Setup with MIDI Setup 126, which is named Internal
Voices. The two are actually separate things. You can edit one without changing the
other. However, if you have not changed the default values of the Internal Voices Setup,
it does have the parameters set to the same values that you will find in Setup 126.
There are two parameters that canÕt be changed from the defaults - the Program and the
Bank. Whenever you turn on the PC2, it will always call up Program 0 Stereo Grand in
the Internal Voices Bank. After that, whatever sound you call up in Internal Voices mode
is remembered and the PC2 will switch to that sound if you switch to Internal Voices
mode from MIDI Setups mode. In addition, the Effects settings arenÕt set by the above
method. Since each individual Program can have its own Effects, the regular method of
choosing an Effect setting for a program (as described in the intro section of this
document) still applies.