Hi Andy,

I'm not sure exactly if it is what you need, but I would have thought that any class compliant midi controller with encoders and some facility for controller banks will serve your purpose. The novation remote25 which I have has 8 encoders, 8 knobs, 8 sliders, an x/y pad, joystick and 16 buttons, plus instant recall of any of 64 stored presets of controller mapping. To be honest that's all overkill for me as the only thing I use beside the keyboard are the encoders and the banks, but it serves its purpose. Editing the controllers is not as direct as you seem to wish for, but setting up a new controller with the editing mode takes about 15 seconds and I've done so in live situations when needed. To my knowledge many midi controllers offer similar capabilities.

As for displaying the current level of a synth or software based parameter on the controller lcd, that all depends mostly on whether the software implements midi feedback or not. Without knowing your specific software its difficult to say what the status of support is.

-michael n



On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 1:28 PM, andy baxter <andy@earthsong.free-online.co.uk> wrote:
Hello,

I have just bought a second hand keyboard, (edirol PCR-500) which has
loads of knobs and sliders on it. The trouble is that all the knobs are
pots, not rotary encoders; encoders would be much more useful I think
because it would mean that if you press a button to switch to a new
synth or effects patch, the correct defaults for it could be
automatically loaded to each of the knobs when you switch. Without that,
it seems like whenever you switch to a new instrument you would have to
spend a while tweaking all the knobs to get the right basic sound.

What I would like is a device with a couple of rotary encoders on it
(you only have two hands), maybe 16 buttons, and a character LCD screen.

The way it would work is (something-like):

- one of the buttons would be for loading new instruments. To switch to
a new instrument, you would press the button and then turn either
encoder. The LCD would show which instrument you were choosing from a
list, and you would press the button again to make the switch.
- most of the buttons would be for accessing different midi controls.
You could assign a midi control to an encoder by pressing the button for
that control first, then pressing a button underneath the encoder you
were assigning.
- having done this, that encoder would be bound to that midi control -
turning it would send out midi messages for that control, and also
update a display on the LCD saying what the level of that control is
currently set at.
- loading a new instrument would automatically set the right default
levels for each controller that that instrument used.

Does anyone know of anything like this that's already being made? If so
I might get hold of one and see if I can hack it to work with linux; if
not I'm thinking of having a go at making my own some time.

cheers,

andy baxter.
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