KORG PA4X 76 User Manual

Page 258

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254| Customizing, recording and editing the Styles and Pads

Reading the fingerboard diagram

You can see how a chord is composed on the fingerboard diagram. Here is

the meaning of the various symbols:

Symbol

Meaning

Red dot

Fingered string (i.e., played note).

White dot

Fifth, playing on the D#2 key.

X

Non played or muted note.

Light grey bar

Barré (a finger crossing all the strings, like a mobile capo).

Dark grey bar

Capo.

Choosing a Key/Chord

The

Key/Chord

parameter pair works in a different way on Guitar tracks

than on other track types. While with other tracks this is always the refer-
ence key used for NTT transposition, with Guitar tracks there is a differ-
ence, whether you are recording a Chord Variation contained in an Intro 1
or Ending 1 Style Element, or a Chord Variation contained in any other Style
Element (or a Pad):

On Intro 1 and Ending 1, this chord will be used as the reference key for the
chord progression.

On all the other Style Elements (or Pad), this chord will be used only for
listening during recording. During playback, the chord will follow chord rec-
ognition.
With Intro 1 and Ending 1 (both Chord Variation 1 and 2) you may also want to
enter a chord progression, to be played on the lowest MIDI octave (

from C-1

to B-1

). Chord types are inserted by using velocity values, as shown in the

following table:

Vel.

Chord type

Vel.

Chord type

1

Major

2

Major 6th

3

Major 7th

4

Major 7th flatted 5th

5

Suspended 4th

6

Suspended 2nd

7

Major 7th suspended 4th

8

Minor

9

Minor 6th

10

Minor 7th

11

Minor 7th flatted 5th

12

Minor major 7th

13

Dominant 7th

14

7th flatted 5th

15

7th suspended 4th

16

Dimished

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