Help!
I bought a Korg Pad Kontrol drum midi device that transmits notes an octive higher tham Logic reads. So when I hit C3, Logic notes it as C2!
Eventually I found I can alter the Display in preferences between Yamaha C3 and Roland C4, so now C3 is C3 on the piano roll, but my point is:
I'm no midi expert by any means but does it make any difference at all if I flip from one to the other between takes? So if I record a bass drum, will it stay a bass drum if I change the Middle C setting?
I bought a Korg Pad Kontrol drum midi device that transmits notes an octive higher tham Logic reads. So when I hit C3, Logic notes it as C2!
Eventually I found I can alter the Display in preferences between Yamaha C3 and Roland C4, so now C3 is C3 on the piano roll, but my point is:
I'm no midi expert by any means but does it make any difference at all if I flip from one to the other between takes? So if I record a bass drum, will it stay a bass drum if I change the Middle C setting?
MAcbook Pro 2.16, G5 iMac, Mac OS X (10.4.8), Logic Pro, Final Cut Studio
Posted on
Music theory question: what is the 'Middle C' (the C on the ledger below the G clef, or on the ledger above the F cleff) - is that C3, or C4? I thought that it was C4, corresponding to the middle key on an 88 key piano, or a pitch of 261.626 Hertz. In that convention, Middle C is designated 'C4'. The 'C3 Convention' is the most commonly used octave designation system on standard MIDI keyboards and this is the convention we will use for this class.
The bones in the neck region of the spine, known as cervical vertebrae, are numbered 1 to 7 beginning from the top. Discs serve as cushions between the vertebrae. The C3 and C4 disc -- commonly noted as C3-C4 -- is between the third and fourth cervical vertebrae. When a disc tears, or herniates, its gel-like center is pushed outward and can exert pressure on nearby nerves or the spinal cord. Symptoms of a C3-C4 herniated disc may include neck pain, headache, numbness, tingling, weakness and possible loss of bowel or bladder control. However, many people with a herniated disc experience no symptoms.