


#ROLAND GAIA PATCHES MOD#
Its working as a cc controller but unfortunately its controlling the mod wheel and not the intended parameter (master tune) I created a cc slider in ctnrlr with the Sysex value of “b0 46 xx” This topic was modified 5 years, 5 months ago by Synthtoast. If i add one line to the “Sysex Formula” input box in cntrlr I’m only going to end up with a combo selector that gives me one and only one “mod” option regardless of which label i select.īasically how do i set a different sysex line to send from cntrlr for every label in the combo box? I can create a combo switch and give it the 3 required labels but how do i add the 3 required sysex lines for the three different states that correspond to the labels.
#ROLAND GAIA PATCHES HOW TO#
It will help me in understanding which parts (bytes?) of the sysex do what and where and how to change it based on which parameter i want to create a control for.Īnother thing i do not understand how to do is how to recreate that mod button in Ctrlr.
#ROLAND GAIA PATCHES FULL#
So my question is why does the second control (“mod”) give me what appears to me to be a full sysex line whilst the first thing i tried (master tune) only send this The value at the end changes from 00 to 7f which i understand when displayed normally is 0-127 – this make complete sense to me.īut when i hit the oscillator mod button which switches between “off”, “sync” and “ring” i get this: When using the midi monitor and viewing the input messages, if i turn the master tune of the oscillator via the synth i get this

i sold a lot of synths in the past because of the pain in programming them and storing patches as opposed to VST instruments it became a really nightmare, and after using the Virus TI Snow ctrlr panel which has turned my snow into a fancy paperweight into almost the only synth i use at the moment i wanted to create a panel for my Roland Gaia sh – 01 that i bought based on its ease of programming and fun factor, the problem with the Gaia is that i enjoy it far more than i thought i would and i actually want to start integrating it into my work with the same ease i do the virus TI (after being spoilt with such integration i can’t go back to saving my patches with limited space and then having to find and make sure they sound right all over again every time i start up my different projects) Multi-timbral would have been nice too, but anything significant would take the unit up to the > $2000 range and place it next to the virus TI polar and out of the range of its target market.Hi, I’m very new to this, starting to grasp SysEx and getting some things on my Roland Gaia to communicate from Ctrlr which is great. Honestly it would be more attractive to me if it came in a smaller version (25 key) or a larger version (61 key) and had the joystick and xy-pad of the X-station instead of pitch and mod wheels.

I am not really shopping for a synth in this price range, but Ultranova looks pretty cool given its feature set and price. We are still waiting for Ultranova's release though! To me Gaia's main selling point is that its interface invites you to jump right in an start tweaking the controls. Given these extra features I would say it is a strong contender. The synthesis engine for the Ultranova looks to be much more advance with more oscillator and filter types and modulation slots. GAIA functions as an audio interface in the sense that it can send and receive audio via USB, but its only audio input is a 1/8" stereo jack that seems to be designed to take iPod output for playing along to music. Menu diving might be required for the hardware unit, but programming via the editor should be straightforward. We should not discount the fact that the Ultranova will function as a 2-in/4-out USB audio interface and will have a sound editor program.
