Jamming to the Yamaha DGX 670 Keyboard Demo Dance and R&B STYLES 🕺💃

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 5

  • @mmn2864
    @mmn2864 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Keep going Sir, your initiative will help me a lot

    • @phillc
      @phillc  ปีที่แล้ว

      Ty my friend. More to come!

    • @FlyingSax57
      @FlyingSax57 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@phillc Hey Bro, thanks a lot for your extensive response, this helped me a lot, all the best to you!

  • @FlyingSax57
    @FlyingSax57 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great demo, thank you! I own one, but as I see, you’ve got only the main part active (the orange light on the right side). If I make this setting on my 670, then I hear the main sound also on the left side and very low, which is really not nice. What is your complete setting for this part? For example, when you play with the trombone as the main instrument, I do not hear any trombone on the left side, only the ACMP part which sounds nice. I can swith the trombone on the left side off via the mixer, but only if I activate the left orange button on the right side of the 670….Many thanks in advance

    • @phillc
      @phillc  11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You're absolutely right, having the main sound also on the left side at a low volume can be undesirable. To achieve the setting you described with the trombone sounding only on the ACMP part and not on the left side, please try this:
      *** Use the Split Point:
      The Split Point feature on the DGX-670 allows you to divide the keyboard into two zones with different sounds assigned to each. You can use this to effectively limit the ACMP range by playing the chords in the desired range on the left side and reserving the right side for the main voice, like the trombone.
      *** Here's how to do it:
      Press the [MENU] button.
      Use the cursor buttons to navigate to "Split Point/Chord Fingering" and press [ENTER].
      ** Use the cursor buttons again to select "Split Point" and press [ENTER].
      Use the [Data Dial] to adjust the split point to the desired octave where you want the ACMP to start. For example, setting the split point to C3 would limit the ACMP to the lower two octaves (C3 to B4).
      Press [EXIT] to close the menu.
      ** Now, when you play chords on the left side of the keyboard below the split point, they will trigger the ACMP, while playing on the right side will trigger the main voice (trombone).
      ** If this fails, please, check out my extended accompaniment video and let me know if it helps detect the problem: th-cam.com/video/bskC0AVp25g/w-d-xo.html