103
Oxygen Pro 49 and 61 Advanced Settings
ARP and Latch Buttons
When the
ARP
button is pressed, it will activate the keyboard’s internal arpeggiator. The
arpeggiator’s rate is based on the current Tempo and Time Division settings – Tempo settings
are editable using the Tempo button. Time Division settings can be accessed by pressing
fader buttons 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32 with the MODE LEDs off (Record, Select, Mute, Solo, and
MIDI) or holding the
Note Repeat
button and turning the
Encoder.
To activate the
ARP Latch
functionality, press the
ARP LATCH
button.
Note:
You can also sync the Arpeggiator to either the current Tempo’s BPM setting, or an
external MIDI Clock source. The clock source can be edited in Preset Edit Mode and
selecting/pressing the Tempo button. Arpeggiator functionality is available in the 2 keyboard
modes, DAW, PRESET.
Note:
You can change the Time Division settings to triplets by pressing the Time Division
button twice. For example, if you wanted the arppegiator to play 1/16
th
note triplets you would
press the 1/16 button twice. The 1/16 fader button would blink/flash to show that triplets were
active.
To edit the arpeggiator,
press
SHIFT
and the
ARP
button.
To edit the arpeggiator's type,
click the
Encoder
in
Type
, and select the desired setting
from the menu.
The mode determines how the arpeggiated notes are played back:
•
Up:
Notes will sound from the lowest to the highest.
•
Down:
Notes will sound from the highest to lowest.
•
Inclusive:
Notes will sound from the lowest to the highest, and then back down. The
lowest and highest notes will sound
twice
at the directional change.
•
Exclusive:
Notes will sound from the lowest to the highest, and then back down. The
lowest and highest notes will sound only
once
at the directional change.
•
Order:
Notes will sound in the order they were pressed.
•
Random:
Notes will sound in random order.
•
Chord:
Notes will sound in a chord.
To set the arpeggiator's octave range,
click the
Encoder
in
Octave
, and select the desired
value:
1
,
2
, or
3
octaves. The Octave range determines how many octaves in the ARP will be
played from a single key press. The more octaves, the more notes will be played by a single
key.
To set the arpeggiator’s gate,
click the
Encoder
in
Gate
, and select the desired value from
5-100.The gate range determines how long a note in the will be played in the arp. The shorter
the gate, the shorter the note.
To set the arpeggiator's swing,
click the
Encoder
in
Swing
, and select the desired setting
between 50% and 75%. The swing range determines how much deviation there will be from
the patterned notes. The higher the swing, the larger the time deviation.