4. USER INTERFACE
The Graphical User Interface of the Mellotron V follows the Arturia paradigm that has been
used in all the most recent virtual instruments (since V Collection 5). It has a main window,
that shows different control panels and editing pages, according to the buttons pressed in
the Upper Toolbar.
That main window is complemented with an Upper Toolbar and a Lower Toolbar.
The Upper Toolbar, besides the mentioned buttons, also contains the Preset Selection
displaying the name of the current selected preset, preset selection filters and navigation
arrows, and the very important Arturia Menu on the left. It also has buttons to access MIDI
Assign and the MIDI Controller Configuration at the right-hand part.
The Lower Toolbar displays the parameter names in the left-hand part. It also has a CPU
consumption meter on the right, as well as a Panic button and MIDI Channel selector button.
The parameter values appear in small floating window "cells" next to the parameter control.
The values update in real-time when we move the controls.
♪
: To know a parameter current value, position the mouse over the corresponding control for about
one second, and a small window appears next to it revealing the value.
4.1. Useful Computer Keyboard Shortcuts
There are several ways to adjust parameters using the mouse and keyboard when using
the Mellotron V.
Usually, to change values in the instrument controls, we click on the corresponding control
and drag the mouse up or down. If the controls are switches, we simply click them to toggle
On or Off. If we want finer editing values, we can use Ctrl+Drag (Cmd+Drag on macOS).
Alternatively, we can mouse Right-Click and Drag. Using this key combination, the values
change in a slower way, which allow us to get more precise values easily.
Double-clicking a control resets it to the default value.
4.2. The virtual keyboards
The Mellotron V has a small virtual keyboard in the main instrument panel. This keyboard is
a mock-up of the original M400 keyboard, with just 35 keys, spanning from G1 to F4. This
was the range of the original Mellotron M400. The Mellotron V can play a much larger range
though.
Besides this, there is a second virtual keyboard positioned at the bottom of the window
when the Advanced panel is open (Open Lid mode). This one spans 96 notes, from C
to B, and is mainly intended to help with the mapping of sounds (either the original
"tapes" included with the instrument or your own samples), providing a visual and audible
reference.
Arturia - User Manual Mellotron V - USER INTERFACE
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Содержание Mellotron V
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