SAVIHost Manual
SAVIHost Manual
SAVIHost Manual
Manual by H. G. Fortune
Menu-Bar
Devices:
This is important for enhanced usage: selecting the proper wave device for playback.
ASIO-Channel Selection
When using ASIO drivers you will
have access this menu where you
may select different channels for
input and output of the audio-signal
depending on the number of I/O-
channels supported by your audio
device.
Buffersetting:
Buffer: setting the buffer size (in samples)
too low leads to „crackling“ sound. If so
then raise the buffersize until crackling
disappears. With a buffersize quite high
there will be a noticable latency (delay)
until the instrument reacts to strokes on a
MIDI-keyboard. This is dependant on the
performance faculties of the audio device
(soundcard, USB-audioadapter etc.)
Effect: opens the menu for loading or saving patchbanks (*.fxb) and selecting patches
select a group of 16 patches and further select a specific patch within this
group.
Note on loading and saving a single patch should be possible for all VSTi since Ver 1.11 of SAVIHost.
Hint: When saving individual patches (and later reloading) it is advisable to use a specific subdirectory of or
to each VSTI – this ensures to have the correct patches for each VSTi in the right place!
The toolbar:
You can play on the simulated MIDI keyboard with the mouse or the PC keyboard.
Whenever the mouse cursor changes to a little hand (), you can play on the keyboard.
You can resize the keyboard drawing with mouse on the upper border.
The Left Mouse Button acts like a finger; as long as you keep it pressed,the note is
played.
The Right Mouse Button acts as a "sticky finger"; if you press it over a note, this note
keeps on playing until you release it by pressing the right mouse button over it once again.
The keyboard is "dynamic"; the closer to the bottom you touch it with the mouse, the
louder the note sounds. Unfortunately, the PC keyboard is not dynamic, so notes played
with the PC keyboard are played with a predefined velocity.
The keyboard can have up to 3 wheels (see Keyboard Configure on how to activate them),
each can be of the following type: a self-centering Pitch Wheel, a Modulation Wheel, and
an (optional) Velocity Wheel, which is useful for temporarily changing the velocity of keys
entered with the PC keyboard.
If the MIDI keyboard has the input focus, you can also use the PC keyboard to generate
MIDI notes. The following keys can be used:
Below the keyboard, octave indicators can be displayed. They mark the currently active
lower and upper keyboard octaves (i.e., the octaves that can be played on the PC
keyboard). To use other octaves, you can drag the octave indicators to a new position.
Left shift, Right shift transposes the PC keyboard's range two octaves down/up
Ins, Del increment/decrement pitch wheel data
Home, End increment/decrement modulation wheel
PgUp, PgDn increment/decrement key velocity
Left, Right decrement/increment upper keyboard octave
Down, Up decrement/increment lower keyboard octave
The default velocity of MIDI notes generated by the PC keyboard can be adjusted with the
Velocity knob on the Keyboard Configure dialog, shown below:
Keyboard configuration:
keyboard shown with activated octave indicators and key labels
In the second tab you can select wheel types and activate some more options like
assigning a selectable MIDI-CC to the second wheel and have arrow-buttons displayed for
fine in- or decrements
This screenshot shows the 2nd wheel set to MIDI-CC 19 to be controlled as well by the two
arrows for fine in- or decrements.
the 3rdtab let's you change the color of the keys – in this example the black keys have
been coloured to blue