KORE 2 – 189
is received. Please read chapter 3. for details about how to use the e
dit
a
rea
. The Midi i
nPut
and o
utPut
a
CtiVity
M
eterS
(labeled In and Out) flash
when MIDI data passes the plug-in’s input or output, respectively.
The V
eloCity
M
aPPing
Section is for scaling Velocity values. Use the four
parameters to the right and select a curve from the t
ranSition
C
urVe
menu
to manipulate the MIDI velocity values of incoming note messages.
The two V
eloCity
parameters set the limits for variable velocity. Outside
of the i
n
r
ange
, the incoming values will be set to the lower and upper
Velocity values, respectively.
You can look at this process as a transition curve in a coordinate system.
The x-value of the first break point is defined by the first parameter of the
i
n
r
ange
and the y-value by the first parameter of the
o
ut
r
ange
. The other
two parameters define x- and y-values for the second break point. When
the right o
ut
value is smaller than the left Out value you get a negative
slope, which can be used for velocity-crossfading applications.
Note that you can only crossfade between two velocity zones with this
concept. More complicated velocity switches are not supported.
The slope of the velocity response curve between the two break points can
be changed via the t
ranSition
C
urVe
menu. You can choose between linear,
four different
SoFt
slopes and four different
Hard
slopes. The S
oFt
curve
ramps up fast with low in-velocities, and tapers off toward higher values
(logarithmic response). With a
H
ard
curve, the curve remains flat for low
values and becomes steeper for higher values (exponential response).
The next parameter of the Midi t
ranSForMer
, t
ranSPoSe
, transposes the
MIDI notes up or down in half tone steps.
%
Internal MIDI plug-ins are
handled in the same way
as any other device in KORE. This
means you can save them as a
KoreSound to recall their settings at
a later stage.