User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- Contents
- USING THE UNIT SAFELY
- Important Notes
- Names of Things and What They Do
- Before You Play
- Listening to Demo Songs
- Performing
- Performing with a Variety of Sounds
- Adjusting the Keyboard Sensitivity (Key Touch)
- Adding Spatial Depth to the Sound (3D Sound Control)
- Adding Liveliness to the Sound (Dynamics Sound Control)
- Adding Reverberation to Sounds (Reverb Effect)
- Changing the Key of the Keyboard (Key Transpose)
- Dividing the Keyboard for Two-person Performance (Twin Piano)
- Performing With Two Layered Tones (Dual Play)
- Performing with Different Tones in the Left and Right Sides of the Keyboard (Split Play)
- Performing with the Metronome
- Sounding a Count to Keep your Timing Accurate
- Playing Back Songs
- Recording
- Saving Your Performance
- Various Settings
- Basic Operation in Function Mode
- Keyboard Settings
- Pedal Settings
- Tuning Settings
- Sound-related Settings
- Metronome Settings
- Count-down Setting
- Song Playback Settings
- MIDI Settings
- Other Settings
- Remembering the Settings (Memory Backup)
- Restoring the Settings to the Factory Condition (Factory Reset)
- Disabling the Buttons (Panel Lock)
- Connecting to Other Devices
- Troubleshooting
- Error Messages
- Tone List
- Internal Song List
- Parameters Stored in Memory Backup
- Music Files That the DP-990 Can Use
- MIDI Implementation Chart
- Main Specifications
- Index
37
Performing
Performing with the keyboard divided at a certain key into a left side and a right side is
called “Split Play,” and the point at which the keyboard is divided is called the “split point.”
In Split Play, you can have a different tone sound in the left and right sides.
At the factory settings the split point is set to “F 3.” The split point key is included in the
left side.
While in Split Play, a sound played in the right side is called a “right-hand tone,” and
the sound played in the left side is called a “left-hand tone.”
fig.SplitPoint-e.eps
As an example, here’s how to play the tone of the [Piano] button as part of a Split
performance.
fig.Panel-Split-e.eps
1.
Press the [Piano] button.
Now, the piano tone is selected.
2.
Press the [Split] button, getting its indicator to light.
The keyboard will be divided into left and right sides.
The F 3 key forms the division between the left and right sides of the keyboard.
The right-hand section of the keyboard plays piano tone, and the left-hand section plays “A.
Bass+Cymbal” tone.
Turning Off Split Play
1.
Press the [Split] button so its illumination is turned off.
The right-hand tone becomes the tone for the entire keyboard.
When you switch from Dual Play (p. 35) to Split Play, the Tone 1 used in Dual Play is
selected as the right-hand tone for Split Play.
Performing with Different Tones in the Left and Right Sides of the
Keyboard (Split Play)
Split Point (Factory default: F 3)
C1 D1 E1 F1 G1 A1 B1A0 B0 C2 C3 C4 C5 C8B7
Left-hand Tone Right-hand Tone
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