Organ Pedal 2004-01-08 08:27 pm Hi Friends,Compliments of the season to you all. Please, how can I get a realistic organ pedal sound? I have tried some options but none sounds satisfactory yet. I will appreciate your suggestions. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #2 – 2004-01-09 03:05 am The above reply may seem facetious, but it is not.The when you play music from NWC (or from MIDI), the sound you get depends on the digital instruments of your sound card (or of your software synth, if that is what you use).If you don't like the organ pedal sound, it may be that your sound card (synth) doesn't have a good sound there. If so, then there's not much NWC can do, since it's not caused by NWC - BUT you can change the instrument from organ to something else. It may well be the case that some odd instrument (bassoon?) sounds more like "organ pedal" than does organ. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #3 – 2004-01-09 03:53 am I use an extra staff with a duplicate part, but sounding one octave lower.On my soundcard, it works quite well. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #4 – 2004-01-09 05:49 pm Actually I was being serious. The main reason is thatthe organ patches on my system have a very slow attackon the lowest notes. The bassoon has a quick and clearattack and keeps the bass-line distinct. On most organsthere are a variety of sounds available to the player.I think on most pipe organs there are pipes that simulatethe sounds of woodwinds, brass, and strings. I guessthere is no single "correct" organ sound. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #5 – 2004-01-14 01:45 pm The pedal register on the organ is used for the bass notes produced by the largest pipes. When the term 'pedal' appears in the score you'll have to go one,two or even three octaves below the notation on the score to simulate 8',16'or 32' pipes. The 32' is generally not available on non-European organs.One octave down is the one you'll use most. The easiest way to do this in NWC is to activate the bass line, press <insert> <clef> choose the bass clef and press <octave down>. This inserts the bass clef with a small 8 underneath it into your score. In this way you retain the notation as it is on the score you use but it will sound one octave lower.Jan Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #6 – 2004-01-14 03:10 pm Jan's method of making the organ sound an octave below what is written is correct, but often there is no "8" on the bass clef although there may be for the tenor part written on a treble clef. To do the same thing without the "8", select "Tools" then "Transpose". Transpose down by 12 semitones w/o Playback Transposition.If you need to transpose by two octaves you will need both methods. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #7 – 2004-01-15 03:16 am If you need to transpose by two octaves you will need both methods.What about just using -24? Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #8 – 2004-01-15 03:12 pm It only has a range of -12 to +12 semitones. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #9 – 2004-01-16 02:14 am It only has a range of -12 to +12 semitones._StaffStaff _Properties...(or F2)Midi tab_TranspositionI can put -24 here. Can't you? Did I get the bonus version? Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #10 – 2004-01-16 11:02 am The Tools, Transpose command has a range of +/- 12. The Transposition field in Staff Properties has a range of +/- 24. Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #12 – 2004-01-16 10:43 pm Doesn't +/- mean the same as ±?Or is that one of those things that not everyone can see on their screens? Quote Selected
Re: Organ Pedal Reply #13 – 2004-01-18 10:42 pm Answer to original question - Best of all, buy a second hand SoundBlaster Live 1024 soundcard off e-bay and install it, then download the JEUX Soundfont (Google will find it for you) - and play real organ music. You'll never ever want to use Church Organ patch 19 again! Quote Selected