![]() ![]() ![]() The Cubase 7 chord track is more for composing and arranging and finding chords based on previous chords. The only problem was that it did not really have separate presets for various chords on every single key, but I could be mistaken.This is now completely different and not comparable to the old chorder plug-in from SX.Īfter playing some hours with Cthulhu I find it not so good like the Cubase 7 chord track. The only problem was that it did not really have separate presets for various chords on every single key, but I could be mistaken.Ĥdamind: I think Cubase could do this already natively, I recall using the Chord Memory in SX3. It's possible! It's just that it's very time-consuming.Ĥdamind: I think Cubase could do this already natively, I recall using the Chord Memory in SX3. Of course, you can save your separate synth racks and do it like that. By then you will probably have tired of the entire ordeal. If you want to load another Bach chorale, you can't you have to adjust every single Chord device separately to get a new set of chords (you can shorten this by using the Transpose device in combination with the Chord device). use the Synth Racks feature to create several "splits" (or zones, however you want to call them) that are exactly one key wide, and put a different Chord device on every single one of 'm. find out if anyone already wrote an equivalent that does the job (just chords, unless you insist on having that arpeggiator as well) ![]() Replicating Cthulhu in Live would be done as follows:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |