It should basically tell Trilian that this note shoudl be played with Part 2 "SlideUpdown" and not Part 1 "Full Range".
I guess it's just one option in the MIDI piano roll that tags the note as "slide articulation", instead of "regular note (full range)", but i've yet to find it. So it seems i have to edit the midi slide notes to be considered as "slides" articulations, since they do not automatically translate as such when imported from Guitar Pro. I thought that doing the latter (importing the midi track on several tracks) and using one instance of Trilian on each track (not too great in terms of performance i know), with the same Trilian preset/multi on both instances (with regular notes on 1, and slides on 2), i would have my second Trilian track/instance playing those slides, but instead it just plays them as regular notes or something. When you import a midi GP bass track with slides and stuff in your DAW, you can either import the midi track on one single track, or import it on several tracks, which seem to be : one track for the "regular notes", and one track for the other articulations (slides and such).
I use the Hardcore Finger bass in Trilian, and on part 1 i load the Full Ranger bank, and on part 2 the SlideUpDown bank (considering my slides in my GP midi bass tracks are mainly UpDown slides). In Trilian when you use a "multi", you can put the "normal notes" on part (in the Trilian sense) 1 (out of the 8 parts available on one multi : 1/2/3/4/5/6/7/8), and put the slides articulations on, say, part 2. The slide notes are a specific "articulation", so when the guy is playing a slide on his keyboard, it means that for this specific note he's switching to the "slide articulation" (as opposed to the regular notes). (NB : i use Reaper for now, and i'll use Cubase 5 in the near future)įrom the way i understand things so far (PLEASE TELL ME IF I'M WRONG) : Not to mention that in the Trilian videos you can see the guy doing this on a MIDI keyboard, but not the MIDI track in the DAW.
I tried to look at it but it's kinda complicated. Click to expand.Ok thanks that's what i thought.