Conduit wrote:Normally with a piano the note only plays for as long as you hold the key, but if you press down the sustain pedal the note will live out either the full duration of the strings vibrating, or until you take your foot off the pedal.
colortwelve wrote:Conduit wrote:Normally with a piano the note only plays for as long as you hold the key, but if you press down the sustain pedal the note will live out either the full duration of the strings vibrating, or until you take your foot off the pedal.
So by that logic couldn't you just program a piano patch with sustain built into it and then write the piano roll notes so that they overlap?
itroitnyah wrote:If that's all it does, then shouldn't there be a knob for the attack, sustain, decay and release, so you should just be able to create an automation clip for the sustain knob?
itroitnyah wrote:@CitricAcid
automation clips are those things that have the lines and the points that you move and then the function that the automation clip is attached to will be changed based on the automation clip. So essentially, when OP would want to "release the pedal" he would simply create a sort of "cliff" in the automation clip that returns the automated parameter to its original position.
itroitnyah wrote:@Conduit
Ok, well, since technically this piano isn't "real" and is a synth type thingy for whatever DAW OP is using, there are probably knobs relating to the decay and release along with a bunch of other knobs controlling various parameters.
@CitricAcid
automation clips are those things that have the lines and the points that you move and then the function that the automation clip is attached to will be changed based on the automation clip. So essentially, when OP would want to "release the pedal" he would simply create a sort of "cliff" in the automation clip that returns the automated parameter to its original position.
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