Operation, Song, locate, Selecting/creating a song – KORG D3200 User Manual

Page 45: 1. creating a new song

Advertising
background image

35

Operation

Song,

Locate

Mixer

Effects

Session

Drums™

Recorder

CD

Data

Drive

USB

MIDI

Upgrading

the system

Recovery

CD

ClickPoint

calibration

Song,

Locate

Operation

Each song drive on the D3200’s internal hard disk can store
up to one hundred songs.

1. Selecting/creating a song

Here’s how to create, rename, or select a song.

1-1. Creating a new song

In order to begin a new recording, you will first need to cre-
ate a new song.

(1) Press the SONG key and select the song page.

The upper part of the tab page shows which song is
selected as the current song.

(2) Click the New button to display the New Song dialog

box.

(3) Click the radio buttons to select the desired combina-

tion of sampling frequency and bit depth for your new
song.

Maximum number of simultaneously usable tracks for
each Song Type

*16 channels is the maximum, combining 12 analog inputs,
+ 2 digital inputs (S/P DIF L, R), + 2 Session Drums (L, R).
**12 channels using any combination of analog inputs, digital in-
puts and Session Drums.

(4) Click the OK button (or press the panel YES key).

The new song will be created following the last existing
song, and will be added to the song list. It will also be
selected as the current song.
The song name will automatically be “Song

*”

(“

*” will be a consecutive number starting from

001.).
The sampling frequency, bit depth, and date and time of
last modification (in this case, the date and time of crea-
tion) will be stored, and displayed next to the song
name.

If you want to create the new song on a different song drive,
click the song list button. In the Select Song dialog box, click
the Drive button to select a different song drive (

→p.36 “Se-

lecting a song from another song drive”).

If the Song Type is 48 kHz/24-bit and you record multiple tracks
(four or more tracks) simultaneously, there is a increased possibil-
ity that the state of the hard disk recording area (i.e., fragmenta-
tion) will cause the “Disk too busy.” message to appear. We
recommend that you always execute “OptimizeTrk” (

p.74) af-

ter recording or editing multiple tracks simultaneously in a 48
kHz/24-bit song.

Song, Locate

Hard disk

PC Drive

How the hard disk, drives, and songs are related

Drive: B

Drive: C

Drive: D

Drive: A

Song drive: A

Current song

(2)

(3)

(4)

Song Type

Recording

Playback

Punch recording

44.1 kHz/16-bit

16*

32

8

48 kHz/16-bit

44.1 kHz/24-bit

12**

16

4

48 kHz/24-bit

Advertising