Synchronizing to MIDI Clock
It is possible to control the delay time of the BPM Mono Delay effect from an external
MIDI clock source, such as a MIDI sequencer or drum machine. Any device which
can output MIDI clock can be used to control this Configuration’s delay time.
If the “Tempo” parameter is turned all the way down, below 000, the value in the
display will read “EcL”, which means “external clock”. The delay time will now be
controlled by the MIDI clock signal received at the [midi IN] port coming from an
external source. If the MIDI clock’s tempo changes, the MidiVerb 4 will chase it. If the
MIDI clock signal is discontinued, the delay time will remain set to the last tempo
which the MIDI clock had been running at.
The Note parameter determines what note value the MidiVerb 4 should synchronize
to. For example, if you set the Note value to 4, then you can synchronize to the
quarter-note beats of the incoming MIDI clock. If instead you set the Note value to 8t,
you can synchronize to eighth-note triplets relative to the incoming MIDI clock
signal. You can also set the Not value to a dotted-note variation, such as *, which lets
you synchronize to the dotted-eighth-note beats relative to the incoming MIDI clock
signal. For more information about using MIDI with the MidiVerb 4, see Chapter 6.
Attention, quand ils parlent de "Note", il s'agit de la durée blanche, noire, croche,...etc, pas de la tonalité