Performance Features
Muting and Soloing
3-19
2. Press
Yes
. the display brießy shows
Setup|NNN|saved!
then returns to MIDI Setups
mode.
When you save a setup this way, the PC2 turns the AutoSplit feature off for that setup, and sets
the low and high notes of each zone. See
Muting and Soloing
on page 3-19 to learn about how this
affects playing setups. If you want, you can edit the setup and turn AutoSplit back on (thereÕs a
good reason to do so, described in
The AutoSplit Feature
on page 3-20). See
Turning AutoSplit On
and Off
on page 4-25 to learn how.
Changing the AutoSplit Key Without Editing
Every setup can have its own AutoSplit Key. The internal setup also has an AutoSplit Key that
determines where the split point goes when you make a setup out of a program by adding a
layer or split.
You can change the AutoSplit Key without leaving Internal Voices Mode or MIDI Setups mode
(you canÕt layer or split in KB3 mode, so you canÕt change the AutoSplit Key there either).
1. Press Zone 3 and Zone 4 simultaneously. The display looks like this (the top line is blank):
AutoSplit|Key:|G#3
2. Use the Alpha Wheel to change the value. You can put it anywhere from C -1 to G 9, but in
most cases, youÕll want it somewhere within the central range of your keyboard.
Instead of using the Alpha Wheel, you can press and hold Enter, and hit the key that you
want to be the split point. This is called Intuitive Entry; see page 4-5 for a full description.
3. Press Zone 3 and Zone 4 simultaneously to return to your previous performance mode.
Changing the AutoSplit Key this way is a performance feature only; as soon as you leave your
current performance mode, the change is lost. You
can
save it, however. Read on.
Saving the AutoSplit Key
If youÕre in MIDI Setups mode, just save the setup, as described in
Saving Quick Layers and Splits
above. If you want to save the AutoSplit Key to the internal setup, follow the procedure
described in
Saving the Internal Setup
on page 3-21.
Muting and Soloing
Setups can give you a nice thick sound, with a different program in each of the four setup zones
(you can arrange the zones so that they all play on different parts of the keyboard, or you can
have them all overlap). You can make your setups even more versatile by muting or soloing
zones, changing the sound by pressing a single button.
On page 3-11 we described how the colors of the LEDs in the zone buttons indicate whether
zones are muted or soloed. There are several other things to keep in mind.