Acousticsamples GD-6 Benutzerhandbuch - Seite 6

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D#4 is the strum up muted,
E4, F4, G4, A4, B4 and C5 (the white keys) are for the 6 different strings,
F#4 triggers the chord but shifted from the Chord Slide value,
G#4 stops the chord and play a hand mute sample,
A#4 stops the chord and plays slide down samples,
A small chord panel displays the chord that you are playing as well as the octave it is in. Right under it, you
have access to a voicing menu that contains all of the possible voicings of that chord on a guitar, and you can
select one for each octave.
In this panel, you can edit the chord you are currently playing, so just click on the edit button, then change the
chord and hit apply to override that chord voicing, or press insert to add that chord to the list of available vicings
for that chord.
You can even export and load a chord configuration using the export and load buttons. The chord configuration
will also contain the information present in the chord builder if you used it.
The Chord Mode can be set in two positions,
the Guitar mode that separates the notes selection from the triggers. So pressing a chord with the left
hand with only make the soft sounds that your left hand would make on a real guitar and you need to
trigger the chords or the single strings with the right hand.
The Piano mode will trigger the chords as soon as you press a chord, the upstrokes and downstrokes
are automatic depending on the position in the current bar. Repeating a chord can be done by releasing
and replaying any of the notes contained in the chord. It can be more intuitive, but does not allow for as
much detail and realism when you play the chords.
The UP/DOWN Trigger controls if the automatic strum up and down is engaged. If set to manual, C4 is the
strum down and D4 is the strum up. If set to Auto, C4 acts as a strum up or down depending on the position in
the current bar.
The Let Ring controls wether the chord stops when you release your right hand. This can be handy for
fast/complex chord progressions.
The Mixed Mode is as its name implies a mix of the solo mode and the chord mode. If you play chords a
regular melody with one note at a time or two as a legato, it will play single notes or hammers and slides as
selected in the solo mode If you play 3 notes or more or play two notes simultaneously, the chord mode is
engaged and it will strum that chord just like in the piano mode.
The Accent, Strum Speed and Strum Center are all linked to the chord simulation. We extracted the data
from hundreds of real guitar strums and allow you to control these parameters.
Accent controls how hard it is to trigger all of the 6 strings with velocity, the min strum number defines
the minimum number of strings that are played in a strum at the lowest velocity.
Strum Speed controls the oversall time needed to strum all 6 strings.
Strum Center is basically your right hand vertical position over the strings, if it is at the top (position 1),
then you will hear more of the first and second string and if you are at the bottom (position 6), you will
hear more of the last two strings.
The Clean Play controls how dirty and precise you want the playing to be, if set at 6, the engine will always use
clean samples, but if at 1, it will mostly use samples of "not pressed well" notes.
The Chord Hammers is probably whatmakes the library the most realistic. It allows you to go from one chord
to another and play the hammer ons and pull offs between them.
The Capo simulates a real capo, you can choose to make it transpose the chords or not, transposing can be
useful if you want to play chords high on the neck.
The Transpose is related to the Capo function. And it will decide if the Capo actually transposes the chord or
not. For example an E chord with the Capo at fret one will sound like an F chord without the transpose function,
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