MIDITEMP MP 22-W, MP 22-CD, MP 88-W, MP 88-CD, PMM 88-E, MT 16-X
MIDITEMP MP 22-W, MP 22-CD, MP 88-W, MP 88-CD, PMM 88-E, MT 16-X
MIDITEMP MP 22-W, MP 22-CD, MP 88-W, MP 88-CD, PMM 88-E, MT 16-X
MIDITEMP MP 22-W, MP 22-CD, MP 88-W, MP 88-CD, PMM 88-E, MT 16-X
85
2. MIDI connections
➀
Connect all the required MIDI outputs on your system to the MIDI inputs of the Matrix.
Connect all the required MIDI outputs on your system to the MIDI inputs of the Matrix.
Connect all the required MIDI outputs on your system to the MIDI inputs of the Matrix.
Connect all the required MIDI outputs on your system to the MIDI inputs of the Matrix.
➁
Connect all the required MIDI outputs of the Matrix to the MIDI inputs on your system.
Connect all the required MIDI outputs of the Matrix to the MIDI inputs on your system.
Connect all the required MIDI outputs of the Matrix to the MIDI inputs on your system.
Connect all the required MIDI outputs of the Matrix to the MIDI inputs on your system.
➂
If your controlling keyboard has sounds of ist own, switch it to “local off“.
If your controlling keyboard has sounds of ist own, switch it to “local off“.
If your controlling keyboard has sounds of ist own, switch it to “local off“.
If your controlling keyboard has sounds of ist own, switch it to “local off“.
If in the MULTIPLAYER you did not make any assignments, you now cannot play a single
expander, you can not record and even your software sequencer sends its data to the land of
nowhere! Indeed, this is not a message of success. Still, there is one advantage: from now on you
can monitor all your routings in the Matrix, being sure, there are no mystic background connections.
Naturally, you now have to read the Routing section to get to know how you can (for
instance) play an expander via your masterkeyboard, or even the internal sounds of the keyboard,
which you just cut out using the “local off“ function. As soon as you start to hear again, you
successfully made your first Routing!
3. MIDI inputs and outputs
3.1 “MIDI-eye“ display
The “MIDI-eye“ display helps you to make and check the MIDI connections in your system,
and to test your MIDI cabling. For example, you could use it to verify whether MIDI data is actually
being sent from the MIDI outputs when a Song is played back. “MIDI-eye“ indicates MIDI activity at
the inputs or outputs using little bargraph meters. Active sensing is also displayed. This is data which
is sent automaticaly every 100 to 300 milliseconds, which means you will see it in the display
immediately whenever a MIDI device is connected which sends active sensing messages.
➊
Press, on the highest level, the key
or
.
LEDs will show which inputs or outputs are connected, and the display will show which of
these are receiving or sending data.
➋
If your system has more than eight MIDI in- and outputs, you can display the next (or
previous) set with
!
.
%
Quit this function by pressing
.
3.2 Switching MIDI inputs and outputs on/off
While in the MIDI-eye window, the number keys act as on/off switches for the MIDI ports.
Each port on the MULTIPLAYER can be activated and de-activated independently (see page 14).
When you switch a MIDI port off using one of the number keys all MIDI transmissions are
blocked, and nothing is sent from it (MIDI OFF). To avoid the possibility of hanging notes, an „All
Notes Off" message is automatically sent from the output being switched off on all 16 MIDI
channels.
This function can only be set manually, and not be stored in a Matrix program!
4. PANIC - Transparent MIDI Reset (TMR)
Please read “8. PANIC – Transparent MIDI Reset (TMR)“, page 18