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On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 9:53 PM, Sjaak <tcplugin@scarlet.be> wrote: > What midi parameters are you > actually controlling with the EWI? On all patches I modify for EWI playing I take away all velocity sensibility and replace it with breath (CC#2). I assign breath (CC#2) to both volume and filter cutoff. I also take away all LFO control of "vibrato" and play the vibrato manually by micro pitch adjustment with my lips (MIDI Pitch Bend). For specific patches I also adjust this Pitch Bend to a small percentage of filter cut-off to give a timbre change to vibrato, so it won't just happen as a pitch variation. Then I assign CC#5 to "portamento/glide on/off". This works brilliantly with Logic's sampler EXS24 and the ES2 synth. It makes it possible to play fast runs where you hit the notes directly but throw in a bit of "inertia" or "whammy dives/rises" with full control. When creating a multi layer patch in the sampler I assign breath (CC#2) to the balance between the two layers. For keyboard this is usually handled by velocity. When playing through Guitar Amp Pro (Logic/MainiStage's guitar amp/speaker simulator) I usually assign breath (CC#2) also to the preamp level - so blowing harder adds more distortion to the sound. Sometimes I can also assign breath to tremolo speed (having the tremolo sweep musically valid values as "16th/dotted/tripled" etc. On "spookey dub step" sounds I assign breath (CC#2) negatively to Feedback of the Tape Delay in a way that the "tape delay" is almost left self oscillating between phrases, but when playing a note the feedbacking loop is backing off to let new audio into the circle. My default for EQ in the "Tape Loop" is to cut out bass to have the self oscillating loop slowly climb upwards (until it becomes just noise after one or two minutes, because of the "tape hiss and flutter" simulation in the TapeDelay plug-in). The point on all tweaks for me is to make the patch more playable, simpler. I use vibrato a lot to imply rhythm, often a counter rhythm to the songs main tempo, and I like to morph the vibrato speed between different grooves while playing melodies or just long notes. Banning velocity makes sense because the EWI is a breath instrument. What I meant by saying "keyboard-ish" is actually a certain percussive quality that relies on velocity, but since velocity happens just once - when you attack a note - it doesn't make sense to control continuously (as when blowing). (For NI Kontakt 2, the sampler, I use slightly different settings. But I don't use Kontakt with Logic/MainStage, only in Bidule setups) Per