6.0
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- About this manual
- Setting up your system
- VST Connections
- The Project window
- Working with projects
- Creating new projects
- Opening projects
- Closing projects
- Saving projects
- The Archive and Backup functions
- Startup Options
- The Project Setup dialog
- Zoom and view options
- Audio handling
- Auditioning audio parts and events
- Scrubbing audio
- Editing parts and events
- Range editing
- Region operations
- The Edit History dialog
- The Preferences dialog
- Working with tracks
- Playback and the Transport panel
- Recording
- Quantizing MIDI and audio
- Fades and crossfades
- The arranger track (Cubase Elements only)
- Using markers
- The Mixer
- Audio effects
- VST instruments and instrument tracks
- Automation
- Audio processing and functions
- The Sample Editor
- The Audio Part Editor
- The Pool
- The MediaBay
- Working with track presets
- Remote controlling Cubase
- MIDI realtime parameters
- Using MIDI devices
- MIDI processing
- The MIDI editors
- Introduction
- Opening a MIDI editor
- The Key Editor – Overview
- Key Editor operations
- The Drum Editor – Overview
- Drum Editor operations
- Working with drum maps
- Using drum name lists
- Working with SysEx messages
- Recording SysEx parameter changes
- Editing SysEx messages
- The Score Editor – Overview
- Score Editor operations
- Editing tempo and signature
- Export Audio Mixdown
- Synchronization
- Video
- ReWire (not in Cubase LE)
- File handling
- Customizing
- Key commands
- Index
241
Using MIDI devices
The selection here will affect which bank is displayed
when you select programs by name for the device in the
track list or Inspector. For example, many instruments use
MIDI channel 10 as an exclusive drum channel, in which
case you would want to select the “Drums” (or “Rhythm
Set”, “Percussion”, etc.) bank for channel 10 in this list.
This would then let you choose between different drum
kits in the track list or Inspector.
Selecting a patch for an installed device
If you return to the Project window at this point, you will
find that the installed device has been added to the MIDI
Output menus (in the track list and the Inspector). Now
you can select patches by name, in the following way:
1. Pull down the Output menu (in the track list or Inspec-
tor) for the track you want to associate the installed device
with, and select the device.
This directs the track to the MIDI output specified for the device in the
MIDI Device Manager. The Bank and Program Selector fields in the track
list and Inspector are replaced by a single Program Selector field that
currently reads “Off”.
2. Click the Program Selector field to display a pop-up
menu, hierarchically listing all the patches in the device.
The list is similar to the one displayed in the MIDI Device Manager. You
can scroll the list up and down (if required), click the plus/minus signs to
show or hide subgroups, etc.
You can also use a filter function here. For this, enter the
search term in the Filter field, e.g. “drum”, and press [Re
-
turn] to display all sounds with “drum” in the name.
3. Click a patch in the list to select it.
This sends the appropriate MIDI message to the device. You can also
scroll the program selection up or down, as with any value.
Renaming patches in a device
The pre-configured devices list is based on the factory-pre-
set patches, i.e. the patches included in the device when
you first bought it. If you have replaced some of the factory
presets with your own patches, you need to modify the de
-
vice so that the patch name list matches the actual device:
1. In the MIDI Device Manager, select the device in the
Installed Devices list.
Make sure that Patch Banks is selected on the pop-up menu at the top of
the window.
2. Activate the Enable Edit checkbox.
When this is turned off (default), you cannot edit the pre-configured
devices.
3. Use the Patch Banks display to locate and select the
patch you want to rename.
In many instruments, the user-editable patches are located in a separate
group or bank.
4. Click on the selected patch in the Patch Banks list to
edit its name.
5. Type in the new name and click OK.
6. Rename the desired patches in this way, and finish by
deactivating Enable Edit again (to avoid modifying the de-
vice by accident).
Ö You can also make more radical changes to the patch
structure in a device (adding or deleting patches, groups
or banks), see below. For example, this is useful if you ex
-
pand your MIDI device by adding extra storage media
such as RAM cards.
Patch Structure
Patches are structured as follows:
• Banks are the main categories of sounds – typically patches,
performances and drums, as described above.
• Each bank can contain any number of groups, represented by
folders in the list.
• The individual patches, performances or drum kits are repre-
sented by presets in the list.
The Commands pop-up menu contains the following items:
Create Bank
Creates a new bank at the highest hierarchical level of the
Patch Banks list. You can rename this by clicking on it and
typing a new name.