The thought of a hardware problem occurred to me, too.
On September 8, 2019 12:54:13 PM HST, Anders Hellquist <lau(a)hellquist.net> wrote:
Or you could open up your midi device and clean the
contact strip. I
just
recently had a velocity problem with just one key on one of my midi
keyboards (just one day before a gig). Opened it up and cleaning the
strip
made it as good as new.
Regards, Anders
On Mon, Sep 9, 2019, 00:24 Christopher Arndt <chris(a)chrisarndt.de>
wrote:
Am 08.09.19 um 16:45 schrieb S.:
> I'm looking for
> some easy Linux compatible options for something I can plug into
Jack to
> modify the velocity curve of *specific keys*
before the signal
reaches
the
synthesizer program. Any tips? Thanks!
Not exactly easy, but another option is writing a custom MIDI filter
script for the Moony [1] LV2 plugin.
Since I wanted to learn how to write these scripts anyway eventually,
I
just wrote a velocity scaling Lua script for
Moony:
https://github.com/SpotlightKid/moony-lv2-scripts/
When you got the Moony LV2 plugin installed (I'll not go into how
compile & install it here), you just copy and paste the Lua script
into
the Plugin GUI editor and then press the
"Send" button at the bottom,
then connect your midi input to Monny and Moony's output to your
softsynth.
You can change the velocity scaling factor and other parameters by
changing the variables at the top of the script. Don't forget to
press
> "Send" again after each change.
>
> Thanks to the Moony author for the very cool plugin!
>
>
> [1]
https://open-music-kontrollers.ch/lv2/moony/
---
David W. Jones
gnome(a)hawaii.rr.com
authenticity, honesty, community