I assume there is a midi CC set up for this that controls a global velocity multiplier, but which one is it?
I assume there is a midi CC set up for this that controls a global velocity multiplier, but which one is it?
Go look in the mirror. You haven’t added anything to this thread and are deluded you’re making things better by insults. All you’re doing is showing how little you know. Perhaps you are best not to respond.
Do you actually know what the ask is here and what is involved?
Perhaps don’t be troll
jord
Main volume is controller 7
SD3 with older sdx,s plus Rooms of Hansa and Death & Darkness. Cubase and wavelab current versions. Roland TD50x using all trigger inputs for triggering SD3 only. Windows 11 computer. Various keyboards and outboard gear as well as VST instruments. Acoustic drums: Yamaha 9000 natural wood and Pearl masters. Various snare drums. RME BabyFace Pro FS and Adam A7X monitors
That cc is great for manipulating the master volume channel and, yes, can be automated. You can also bind other cc to the other mixer, faders and automate them. I have both a control surface and keyboard workstations with sliders to manipulate these channels.
Volume is not outgoing data in the MIDI sense. Velocity, however, is data. Again, reiterating what I stated earlier in this thread, data is not automatable in that sense. It has to be transformed. to be transformed, do you need some form of controller. This is innocence what keyboards, MIDI pads, and E drums do. They transform how hard you hit the controller into MIDI. One way to automate this within your DAW, if it supports it (Logic does support it) is to feed the MIDI out from Superior Drummer or put the MIDI on a track in your DAW and then use a MIDI transformer object targeting the velocity value of a note and control that object with a MIDI CC. That is how you can automate velocity data.
jord
No products in the cart.
Get all the latest on new releases,
updates and offers directly to your inbox.
Note: By clicking the 'I WANT IN' button, you will not be creating a Toontrack user account. You will only sign up to get our newsletters, offers and promotions to your inbox. You can unsubscribe at any time from a link at the bottom of each email. If you want to learn more about our privacy policy, please find detailed information here.
