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Controlling parameters in a daw, More about cc# patterns – Arturia KeyStep Pro Keyboard with Advanced Sequencer and Arpeggiator User Manual

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8.2.3. Controlling Parameters in a DAW

With CC# messages you can also control parameters of plugins, including virtual

instruments, loaded in your DAW. All plugins of the Arturia V Collection series have a MIDI

learn feature that enables you to link knobs on the KeyStep Pro front panel to knobs in the

plugin. Imagine all the new sonic options you have when using the KeyStep Pro's encoders

to simultaneously control the filters of the CZ V, the DX7 V and the Buchla Easel V, for

example.

Please refer to the documentation that comes with your DAW and the V Collection for

detailed descriptions of how to do this.

: CC# messages transmitted over MIDI can also be used to control parameters on a modular

system, but to make that possible you need a module capable of converting CC# values to analog
voltages.

The controller assignments can be set in Utility>Controller and the

MIDI Control Center

[p.155]

.

8.2.4. More about CC# Patterns

The CC# values can be sequenced as we've seen above. However, they can also be used in

a more general way to set parameters in an external synth. If you send a certain CC# value

in the first step of a Pattern and there are no other values programmed in that Pattern, this

initial value will be held during the sequence. This feature gives you the creative option of

sending a new configuration to the external synth, module or virtual instrument at the start

of each Pattern!

!: Patterns can be chained. CC# Patterns are no exception. If you have three similar Patterns chained,

you can store CC# values in the first step of each Pattern. For example, in the first Pattern, you store a
CC# value for a half-open filter; in the second Pattern you store a CC# value that opens the filter a bit
further; in the third Pattern you store a CC# value that fully opens the filter.

If you use the steps of Patterns to send different CC# values in each step, there is a feature

you can use to great effect: the looper, the horizontal control strip located under the two

vertical touch strips. The looper also works in Control mode. If you loop part of a sequence,

you will also loop the CC# values in that part of the sequence.

: There is one important difference between a normal track and a track in Control mode: a normal

track can be muted, but a control track cannot. It will always transmit CC# messages as long as it is
playing.

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Arturia - User Manual Keystep Pro - Control Mode