
- 58 -
What can I do with the Inspector?
● This chapter applies to MIDI Tracks and Parts only. For Audio Tracks, the In-
spector is mainly used for enabling recording, monitoring, etc (see the Getting
Started book).
Using the parameters in the Inspector you can:
• Change one or several aspects
in the playback
of your recorded music
(like volume, velocity, pitch, selected sound, etc).
These changes are easily reversible as they are made to what is played back,
not to what has actually been recorded.
• Change your music in real-time -
i.e. while you play
- for instance have it
transposed.
This is done in connection with the Thru-function in Cubase VST and we call
it Realtime Thruing.
The Inspector and how to use it is described in the chapter “The Track Columns and
the Inspector” in Getting Started; this chapter mainly explains the parameters. Just
remember the following:
• The settings you make in the Inspector will affect the material during play-
back. You do not change anything recorded.
• Since the Inspector settings don’t actually change anything recorded, they
will not be reflected in the MIDI Editors. To convert the Inspector settings to
“real” MIDI Events, you need to use the Freeze Play Parameter function on
the Functions menu (see the Getting Started book).
• When you change the value of a parameter in the Inspector, the new value is
immediately sent out to the MIDI Output.
• The values sent out will not only affect the sound source assigned to the se-
lected Track, but all MIDI devices on the same Output and MIDI Channel.
Comentários a estes Manuais