This part is for people for whose the "soundtacking" method is not
really understood. It will be useful for the ones coming from MIDI and
the ones who usually use a piano roll or a score.
The soundtrack work method, quite different from any you may have used
before, is more SIMPLE !....
Here are the fundamental notions you have to know :
- The time, unlike a piano piano roll or a score, is represented VERTICALY.
Each horizontal numbered line (here from 18 to 34) that you see corresponds
to a half-quaver. There is, by default, 64 lines. So 64
successive half-quavers numbered from 01 to 64. It's on these lines
where we're going to put our sounds (note + sample). Please read the
documentation to know how to set a quadruple-croche.
- The tracks are aligned HORIZONTALY (each one is beside the
others). Exactly as on a mix table. You can have up to 64 tracks. All tracks
are played simultaneously.
This group TIME+TRACKS is called a PATTERN. Remember this
word, it's important.
So, if you have 13 tracks, you can play simultaneously 13 sounds each
half-quaver (1 sound a line and a track).
Note this :
- If we put a sound on each line of the track 1, then, when
playing (by pressing PLAY), we'll hear 64 half-quavers
(i.e : one half-quaver with a sound, followed
by a half-quaver with a sound, followed by a half-quaver with a sound,
and so on).
- If we put a sound each 2 lines (line 01, 03, 05 etc...), then
we'll hear 32 quavers.
(i.e : one half-quaver with a sound, followed
by an empty half-quaver, followed by a half-quaver with a sound, and
so on).
- If we put a sound each 4 lines, (line 01, 05, 09 etc...),
then we'll hear
16 crotchets.
(i.e : one half-quaver with a sound, followed
by 3 empty half-quavers, followed by a half-quaver with a sound, followed
by 3 empty half-quavers, and so on).
In conclusion, we can say that a pattern includes 64 half-quavers,
or also 32 quavers, or also 16 crotchets (or 16 beats).
You also understand that there is no need to indicate the duration
of each note, because a sound is played until another one comes to off
it on the same track (see the Pattern Command in the documentation to know
how to off a note).
NB: a track can, by itself, play many sounds at the same time if you
have activated the polyphony of this track. See the documentation to know
more about it.
An exemple :
- I have in my sampler a piano sound, it's the second sample. It has,
then, the number 02.
- I want to play a D# (French: Re#) at the octave 4, the note
is D#4.
- I don't want to alter the sound. (for alteration commands, see the
documentation in the Pattern Command section).
My sound will then look like this : C#4 02 - - -
(First the note C#, followed by the octave 4, followed by the sample
number 02, followed by no command - - -).
You can write a sound on any line of any track. You have just to place
the cursor, where you want, using the keyboard arrow keys. You can also
use the mouse to click anywhere on any track.
Your cursor MUST be at the extrem left of the track where you want
to put a sound. use TAB or SHIFT+TAB to move quickly from a track to another.
Here are the correspondances of your computer keyboard with a piano.
AZERTY keyboard
QWERTY Keyboard
(pictures from the Quickstart)
- At the begining, you have a squared cursor :
If you press a key of your keyboard (or of your MIDI keyboard), you
hear the CURRENT sample (displayed in the sampler) being played. To change
the current sample, press + or - on the numeric pad. While your cursor
is squared, the sample is played but not written on the track. To do so,
you need your cursor to be ROUNDED, if so, it will mean that you are in
EDIT mode.
- To have a Rounded cursor (EDIT mode) :
There is two ways to activate/desactivate the EDIT mode: Either by
clicking on the round "ED" button placed at the up center of Digital-Tracker,
or by pressing the "page down" key (this key is placed above the arrow
keys, it can also have a symbol of a "double arrow" pointing downward).
Now, you cursor is rounded (you are in EDIT mode). Each time you press a note, this one is written on the line where is your cursor, and the cursor moves down to the next line (the next half-quaver). You can also set the cursor to move down 2 lines or more each time by changing the "Jump Y" parameter which is above the pattern (center of the screen). "Jump Y" is like "quantize".
When you write a note on a line, the (current) sample number and the (current) octave are automatically written.
Desactivate the EDIT mode using the same way you activated it. Then
click on PLAY (see QUICKSTART), or press "." (of the numeric pad) to play
the pattern.