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Turning off Rechannelization – MIDI Channel “Any”
There’s one situation where you might not want rechannelizing and that’s when
you have a Track that contains Events on multiple MIDI Channels. You might for
example have:
• Recorded with a keyboard that can be “split” so that it transmits on two MIDI
Channels.
• A guitar synthesizer where each string can transmit on a different MIDI Chan-
nel.
• Recorded the output of another MIDI sequencer onto a Track in Cubase VST.
• Imported a MIDI File of Type 0, which by definition contains only one Track,
possibly with Events on several MIDI Channels.
In each of these situations you might want to have the Track transmit on all its
MIDI Channels – the MIDI Channels actually stored with each Event, as described
above. This would allow you to set up several sounds and play them all from one
Track.
To do this, set the Track to MIDI Channel “Any” (the “lowest” value ).
Summary
To summarize: When a Track is set to MIDI Channel “Any”, rechannelizing is
turned off, and the Events will be transmitted on their original MIDI Channels in-
stead.
These Events, on
different MIDI
Channels...
6
6
2
6
2
...will play back on their
original MIDI Channels since
the Track is set to “Any”.
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