Author Topic: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change  (Read 9053 times)

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Offline Normanfernandez

What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« on: August 11, 2018, 09:08:46 AM »
I have been trying to create my own Multi pads,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7q-Ob11Px7g&list=PL3rjqgoqj7LIZO0dHYgzivl29DtAJ8FQv&index=10

PSR-A3000 Tutorial - Multipad Creator (Part 2 - creation with Cubase software)   

He does not say anything about MSB LSB Program Change, also how he got that Instrument,

If someone has a good idea, Please DM me, i have been trying to create Guitar multi pads,
Norman Fernandez Keyboardplayer
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCngm8h5k5NmKnowJpkxlDBQ

PSR S770 - Roland FP 30 - PSR 280
Cubase - Kontakt6
 

SeaGtGruff

  • Guest
Re: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« Reply #1 on: August 11, 2018, 11:07:53 AM »
He said that he got the Bank Select MSB, LSB, and Program Change either by simply selecting the desired instrument or by looking at the displayed values and entering them manually. But you could also look them up in the Voice List section of the Data List for your instrument. If the voice is from an expansion pack, I think the information about the expansion pack should include the Bank Select MSB, LSB, and Program Change values of the voices and kits added by the pack.
 

Offline Normanfernandez

Re: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« Reply #2 on: August 11, 2018, 01:02:37 PM »
What is the Function of
MSB LSB
And Program Changer.
Norman Fernandez Keyboardplayer
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCngm8h5k5NmKnowJpkxlDBQ

PSR S770 - Roland FP 30 - PSR 280
Cubase - Kontakt6
 

Offline pjd

Re: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« Reply #3 on: August 11, 2018, 03:25:47 PM »
If you're sequencing in MIDI, the MSB, LSB and program change values select a voice in a specified MIDI song/style channel. For more information, I recommend searching on "MIDI program change" and diving in.

All the best -- pj
 

SeaGtGruff

  • Guest
Re: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« Reply #4 on: August 11, 2018, 04:22:12 PM »
The simplest answer is that these three things are needed to select one of the keyboard's voices-- sort of like an ID number that's broken up into three parts, and all three parts are needed to make a complete ID.

A longer and more detailed explanation is that MIDI uses the term "program" to mean an instrument sound-- that is, what Yamaha calls a "voice," what Casio calls a "tone," what synthesizer players call a "patch," and more or less what musicologists refer to as "timbre."

In the original "General MIDI" or "GM" specification-- now often called "General MIDI Level 1" or "GM1" to distinguish it from the later "General MIDI Level 2" or "GM2" specification-- there were only 128 different programs or instrument sounds defined. There were actually more if we include the sounds that make up the drum kit, but the GM specification doesn't consider the drum kit to be a program per se.

In any case, the 128 GM programs are organized into 16 instrument "families" or categories, and each family has 8 programs or instrument sounds:

Programs ... Family
001 - 008 = Piano
009 - 016 = Chromatic Percussion
017 - 024 = Organ
025 - 032 = Guitar
033 - 040 = Bass
041 - 048 = Strings
049 - 056 = Ensemble
057 - 064 = Brass
065 - 072 = Reed
073 - 080 = Pipe
081 - 088 = Synth Lead
089 - 096 = Synth Pad
097 - 104 = Synth Effects
105 - 112 = Ethnic
113 - 120 = Percussive
121 - 128 = Sound Effects

At one time 128 different instrument sounds seemed like a lot for an electronic keyboard to be able to make; for instance, the earliest Yamaha keyboards were limited to perhaps 8 or fewer sounds, then perhaps 16, then 100, and then 128. But as electronic keyboards continued to grow in sophistication, manufacturers like Yamaha and Roland wanted to include more than just 128 programs and 1 drum kit. They developed extensions to the General MIDI standard known as XG (Yamaha) and GS (Roland). Among other things, these extensions allowed for many more than 128 programs by creating additional "banks" containing different variations of the original GM programs.

However, instead of simply allowing for 128 different program banks, XG and GS (and later GM2) split the bank numbers up into two values, the "MSB" or "Most Significant Byte," and the "LSB" or "Least Significant Byte," each of which could have 128 possible values. The complete bank number equals 128 * MSB + LSB, where the MSB and the LSB can range in value from 0 to 127.

So you need to specify the desired bank number and program number to identify and select a particular voice on the keyboard, but the bank number is split into the MSB and the LSB, giving three parts to a voice's ID-- the MSB of its bank number, the LSB of its bank number, and its program number.
 
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Offline Joe H

Re: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« Reply #5 on: August 12, 2018, 01:39:27 AM »
Norman,

Here is something for you to read.  See Attachment. It will answer a lot of your questions about MIDI.

Joe H

[attachment deleted by admin]
Music is the Universal Language!

My Article: Using Multi Pads in registrations. Download Regs, Styles & MPs:  http://psrtutorial.com/music/articles/dancemusic.html
 
The following users thanked this post: Normanfernandez

Offline Normanfernandez

Re: What is MSB, LSB , Program Change
« Reply #6 on: August 12, 2018, 09:25:26 AM »
Thank you!
Norman Fernandez Keyboardplayer
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCngm8h5k5NmKnowJpkxlDBQ

PSR S770 - Roland FP 30 - PSR 280
Cubase - Kontakt6