beautypg.com

Midi implementation, About tuning, Equal temperament – Roland MIDI Implementation F-120R User Manual

Page 16: Just temperament (keytone c), Arabian scale

background image

MIDI Implementation

16

Example of an Exclusive Message and Calculating a

Checksum

Roland Exclusive messages are transmitted with a checksum at the end (before F7)

to make sure that the message was correctly received. The value of the checksum is

determined by the address and data (or size) of the transmitted exclusive message.

How to Calculate the Checksum (Hexadecimal

Numbers are Indicated by ‘H’)

The checksum is a value derived by adding the address, size and checksum itself and

inverting the lower 7 bits.

Here’s an example of how the checksum is calculated. We will assume that in the

exclusive message we are transmitting, the address is aa bb ccH and the data or size

is dd ee ff H.

aa + bb + cc + dd + ee + ff = sum

sum / 128 = quotient ... remainder

128 - remainder = checksum

(However, the checksum will be 0 if the remainder is 0.)

Setting REVERB MACRO to ROOM 3

According to the “Parameter Address Map,” the REVERB MACRO Address is 40 01 30H,

and ROOM

3 is a value of 02H. Thus,

F0 41 10 42 12 40

01

30

02 ??

F7

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Address data

Checksum (6)

(1) Exclusive Status, (2) ID (Roland), (3) Device ID (17),

(4) Model ID (GS), (5) Command ID (DT1), (6) End of Exclusive

Next we calculate the checksum.

40H + 01H + 30H + 02H = 64 + 1 + 48 + 2 = 115 (sum)

115 (sum) / 128 = 0 (quotient) ... 115 (remainder)

checksum = 128 - 115 (remainder) = 13 = 0DH

This means that F0 41 10 42 12 40 01 30 02 0D F7 is the message we transmit.

About Tuning

In MIDI, individual Parts are tuned by sending RPN #1 (Master Fine Tuning) to the

appropriate MIDI channel.

In MIDI, an entire device is tuned by either sending RPN #1 to all MIDI channels being

used, or by sending a System Exclusive MASTER TUNE (address 40 00 00H).

RPN #1 allows tuning to be specifi ed in steps of approximately 0.012 cents (to be

precise, 100/8192 cent), and System Exclusive MASTER TUNE allows tuning in steps of

0.1 cent. One cent is 1/100th of a semitone.

The values of RPN #1 (Master Fine Tuning) and System Exclusive MASTER TUNE are

added together to determine the actual pitch sounded by each Part.

+----------+--------+---------------+--------------------+
| Hz in A4 | cent | RPN #1 | Sys.Ex. 40 00 00 |
+----------+--------+---------------+--------------------+
| 445.0 | +19.56 | 4C 43 (+1603) | 00 04 0C 04 (+196) |
| 444.0 | +15.67 | 4A 03 (+1283) | 00 04 09 0D (+157) |
| 443.0 | +11.76 | 47 44 (+ 964) | 00 04 07 06 (+118) |
| 442.0 | +7.85 | 45 03 (+ 643) | 00 04 04 0F (+ 79) |
| 441.0 | +3.93 | 42 42 (+ 322) | 00 04 02 07 (+ 39) |
| 440.0 | 0.00 | 40 00 ( 0) | 00 04 00 00 ( 0) |
| 439.0 | -3.94 | 3D 3D (- 323) | 00 03 0D 09 (- 39) |
| 438.0 | -7.89 | 3A 7A (- 646) | 00 03 0B 01 (- 79) |
+----------+--------+---------------+--------------------+

Frequently used tuning values are given in the following table for your reference.

Values are in hexadecimal (decimal in parentheses).

Set the tuning of MIDI channel 3 to A4 = 442.0 Hz

Send RPN#1 to MIDI channel 3. From the above table, the value is 45 03H.

B2

64 00

MIDI ch.3, lower byte of RPN parameter number: 00H

(B2)

65 01

(MIDI ch.3) upper byte of RPN parameter number: 01H

(B2)

06 45

(MIDI ch.3) upper byte of parameter value: 45H

(B2)

26 03

(MIDI ch.3) lower byte of parameter value: 03H

(B2)

64 7F

(MIDI ch.3) lower byte of RPN parameter number: 7FH

(B2)

65 7F

(MIDI ch.3) upper byte of RPN parameter number: 7FH

The Scale Tune Feature (Address: 40 1x 40)

The scale Tune feature allows you to fi nely adjust the individual pitch of the notes

from C through B. Though the settings are made while working with one octave,

the fi ne adjustments will aff ect all octaves. By making the appropriate Scale Tune

settings, you can obtain a complete variety of tuning methods other than equal

temperament. As examples, three possible types of scale setting are explained below.

Equal Temperament

This method of tuning divides the octave into 12 equal parts. It is currently the most

widely used form of tuning, especially in occidental music. On this instrument, the

default settings for the Scale Tune feature produce equal temperament.

Just Temperament (Keytone C)

The three main chords resound much more beautifully than with equal tempera-

ment, but this benefi t can only be obtained in one key. If transposed, the chords tend

to become ambiguous.

The example given involves settings for a key in which C is the keynote.

Arabian Scale

By altering the setting for Scale Tune, you can obtain a variety of other tunings suited

for ethnic music. For example, the settings introduced below will set the unit to use

the Arabian Scale.

Example Settings

Note name

Equal Temperament Just Temperament Arabian Scale

(Keytone

C)

C 0 0 -6

C# 0 -8 +45

D 0 +4 -2

D# 0 +16

-12

E 0 -14

-51

F 0 -2 -8

F# 0 -10 +43

G 0 +2

-4

G# 0 +14

+47

A 0 -16

0

A# 0 +14

-10

B 0 -12

-49

The values in the table are given in cents. Refer to the explanation of Scale Tuning to

convert these values to hexadecimal, and transmit them as exclusive data.

For example, to set the tune (C-B) of the Part1 Arabian Scale, send the data as follows:

F0 41 10 42 12 40 11 40 3A 6D 3E 34 0D 38 6B 3C 6F 40 36 0F 50 F7