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Arp 3/4 & 6/8 piano styles?

Started by Dave Nuttall, October 28, 2022, 06:53:46 AM

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Dave Nuttall

Yamaha styles collections typically contain numerous slow and medium tempo arpeggio styles.  There are a few that are piano dominant but generally they are guitar especially in 3/4 and 6/8 time.

One of my favorites is Guitar Serenade, but it doesn't seem to be willing to become a "piano serenade".  Also, there are many ballad styles that are piano (or could be), but only appear as 4/4 styles.

If you have piano styles in 3/4 and 6/8, I'd be grateful to get access to them.   The stride and "Vienna waltz" type are not suitable for the music I want to play/record.

TIA.
Dave
Genos, ProTools, Cubase AI10, Win10,  BIAB-2022, Sibelius Ultimate, MixMaster, PRSUTI, StyleMagic, StyleWorks, and Baldwin SF-10 acoustic piano.

bpsafran

You can change the guitar to a piano in a registration.

mikf

Quote from: bpsafran on October 28, 2022, 08:02:25 AM
You can change the guitar to a piano in a registration.
No, you need to go into style creator and change the guitar to piano within the style, then save the style with a new name.
I am not sure what he means, by "not willing to become a piano serenade". Maybe he means it just doesn't sound good with the instrument change.
Mike

Dave Nuttall

Quote from: mikf on October 28, 2022, 08:59:37 AM
No, you need to go into style creator and change the guitar to piano within the style, then save the style with a new name.
I am not sure what he means, by "not willing to become a piano serenade". Maybe he means it just doesn't sound good with the instrument change.
Mike

That is exactly what I mean, Mike!
Genos, ProTools, Cubase AI10, Win10,  BIAB-2022, Sibelius Ultimate, MixMaster, PRSUTI, StyleMagic, StyleWorks, and Baldwin SF-10 acoustic piano.

Joe H

Dave,

You should be able to use the Arp Unit Multiply parameter to get 3/4 or 6/8 time. Just set one of the Live Control knobs to control Arp Unit Multiply and experiment with it.

Joe H
Music is the Universal Language!

My Article: Using Multi Pads in registrations. Download Regs, Styles & MPs:  http://psrtutorial.com/music/articles/dancemusic.html

overover

Quote from: bpsafran on October 28, 2022, 08:02:25 AM
You can change the guitar to a piano in a registration.

Quote from: mikf on October 28, 2022, 08:59:37 AM
No, you need to go into style creator and change the guitar to piano within the style, then save the style with a new name.
I am not sure what he means, by "not willing to become a piano serenade". Maybe he means it just doesn't sound good with the instrument change.
Mike

You don't necessarily have to go into the Style Creator, but changes to the Style that were previously made in the Mixer can also be memorized directly in Registrations. (With the restriction that the changes then apply equally to ALL Style Sections.)


Best regards,
Chris
● Everyone kept saying "That won't work!" - Then someone came along who didn't know that, and - just did it.
● Never put the Manual too far away: There's more in it than you think! ;-)

Dave Nuttall

Quote from: Joe H on October 30, 2022, 10:07:50 AM
You should be able to use the Arp Unit Multiply parameter to get 3/4 or 6/8 time. Just set one of the Live Control knobs to control Arp Unit Multiply and experiment with it.

Guess I'll have to "study up" on that, Joe!
Thanks for the input.
Genos, ProTools, Cubase AI10, Win10,  BIAB-2022, Sibelius Ultimate, MixMaster, PRSUTI, StyleMagic, StyleWorks, and Baldwin SF-10 acoustic piano.

mikf

The style creator is not very intimidating to do something simple like an instrument change. It seems like the simplest way, why not try it. Just pick out the track with the guitar arpeggio, change instrument to piano or whatever, save the style with a new name, like piano serenade, then try it. If you don't like it, then maybe you can take the next step and re-record just that one track yourself. Save it, see how it sounds. It's all trial and error. You can't do any harm.
Mike

Joe H

Quote from: Dave Nuttall on October 30, 2022, 04:08:45 PM
Guess I'll have to "study up" on that, Joe!
Thanks for the input.

Dave,

I think I misunderstood your question or concern.  I thought you were talking about the arpeggiator.

Sorry for the confusion.

Joe H
Music is the Universal Language!

My Article: Using Multi Pads in registrations. Download Regs, Styles & MPs:  http://psrtutorial.com/music/articles/dancemusic.html