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Editing MIDI Parts in Drum Edit
You may also edit regular MIDI Parts in Drum Edit, by selecting the Part(s) and se-
lecting Drum Edit from the Edit menu or by pressing [Control]-[D] on the compu-
ter keyboard. When you do this, a simplified Drum Map is used where there is no
O-note or Instrument settings:
If you open a MIDI Part in Drum Edit, each note will be displayed on the “line”
(Sound) whose I-note setting is the same as the note’s actual note number. If you
for example have a MIDI Part containing a note with the note number D2, this note
will be displayed on the line of the Sound with the I-note value of D2 – if there is
such a Sound in the Drum Map! Notes will be “invisible” in Drum Edit if there are
no Sounds with the right I-note values.
When you use Drum Edit to edit MIDI Tracks, some of the columns work differ-
ently than with Drum Tracks:
Changing the Drum Map
If you change the I-Note for a Sound while editing, the notes previously displayed
on that line will of course disappear since the I-Note values doesn't correspond to
the notes anymore. Conversely, all notes that are already in the Part and have the
same note number as the new I-Note value will appear.
I-Note The I-Note is the note (the key, the MIDI Note number) used to input, dis-
play and play back the Sound.
Chn This will be the Channel number for the notes you draw in or in any
other way input directly in the editor. For this to have any effect you must
set the Part (or Track) to MIDI Channel "Any" in the Arrange Window.
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