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Originally Posted by jetplane666666 Yes but you misread my original post. I don't want to start an argument about the Environment but I'm curious how exactly one would do this in other programs. Like I said I replaced the original keyboard with a new one that had different velocity scaling on the black keys. Here is a pic of the part of my environment that corrects this:
As you can see I use one transformer configured as a scaler for each black key to attenuate the response. At the right is the detail for one of the scalers. This is much more surgical than simply "applying an input transformer on a midi channel". |
Well, here you go. I'm not wanting to start a dispute about the power of the environment window; like I said, having used Logic extensively from Version 2 to 6.4.whatever, I was for a longtime a big proponent of Logic.
What did become clear to me however, is that certain things can be simplified greatly without compromising on flexibillity. And the example you gave me was to me, one of those things that doesn't need an extensive diagram.
So, as an example, here is your diagram in Nuendo's input transformer. Basically a quite simple if->then loop that multiplies the velocity with a value if it meets the condition that it is the key I've specified; in this case, a few black keys. Naturally I could add all the black keys I want, but I thought 3 was enough to illustrate the example.
All the best,
Joe