To answer your questions, Yes i do change sounds using pads. To do this, navigate to performance mode then KBD menu. Pad 1 calls on part 1, pad 2 for part 2, so on and so forth. If it’s ON, it’s gonna make a sound regardless which pad you press. If it’s OFF, it’s only gonna make a sound if you press the pad which corresponds to the part (to mimic scene changes). Each of the 16 parts can further be divided into four parts (called oscillators/sound generators). Each oscillator can be assigned with different sounds or splits. To do this, you need to go to patch edit and enter the sounds and splits manually in each oscillator. To change how the sound behaves, you need to edit the envelopes. This is called subtractive synthesis. Hope this helped.
Cool vid. Imagine having Jonathan Caine and Neil Schon warped into one person. Oh wait.... Edward Van Halen!!!! I mean... the Cat could do it all. He could play just about any instrument he could get his hands on. Piano, drums, Bass and keys - all at an extremely high level. And probably a lot of other instruments that we don't even know about. And one of the greatest song writers of all time. Just an incredible, almost other-worldly talent. I miss you Edward. I hope you are resting well my Friend.
Hi! I have a Juno DS and I am learning Final Countdown. What is the sound did you chose for the right hand at 2:24? That is the classic sound but I am not sure what that is on the dials. That is a GREAT sound choice.
Hi! Great video! I've noticed that you use the Phrase Pads for patch changes. Do you know of any tutorials that explain how to do this? Still learning the awesome Juno DS! 🤓
Hi , are you using pattern sequencer on the DS? It seems there is a limitation that while in pattern sequencer mode ( when some pattern plays in the background) you cannot really split or use anything in performance mode. Each pad is just one patch that’s it. Is there a workaround? While playing a pattern, can you assign a performance (instead of patch) to a pad ?
@@keyz82 Exactly, I believe that I would have to save as performances, by the Juno DI software to work. If not for a lot of work for you? I thank. I will leave an email in which you can send me the files, if possible of course. For those who are learning like me, it's really cool to get the tones with this quality, both to play the songs, and to learn how the programming was made. Thanks. masapsouza@yahoo.com.br
@@keyz82 My keyboard is an XPS 30 it's practically the same keyboard as the Juno DS, I sited the Juno DI software because I've already passed files from the XPS-10, which was my old keyboard, to my XPS30 using this software. I believe that if you save by your program it will work here but I'm not sure too. Maybe even a backup for sure, as the XPS30 and Juno Ds are pretty much the same keyboard. As far as I know they xps10, xps30 and Juno Ds use the same software.
How do you do, so that when pressing pad 2 change the performance ??? I have tried to do it by grouping two tones in the same channel, but I cannot split them. best rewards
i used oscillators from patch edit. as you already know, every pad calls on a single layer from performance and since I’m using oscillators that means all the sounds can be recalled in a single layer. you can also split the sounds from there
@@keyz82 I honestly did not understand very well; could you make a tutorial about that? It would be very helpful to me, and I would really appreciate it. best rewards !!!
I’ve noticed that if you set a part to “off” in the performance, pressing its corresponding pad will turn it “on”. I use this to add a new tone to the mix. If there’s more functionality, I’d love to see a video tutorial as well. Sixteen parts are a lot if you can’t selectively activate and deactivate portions.
its a custom patch so you wont be able to find it on the presets. you can try loading those sounds on your juno but you have to load my save file which means you will lose your files :)
Pretty sure the Juno Ds has the Jump Synth as a standard preset. It is called Jump. It's the most close you can get without having to build the patch yourself.