If you want to use an external MIDI keyboard with your setup you should keep these things in mind:ġ) Set Sundog's MIDI In to your external MIDI keyboardĢ) Don't use your external MIDI keyboard as an input device in Ableton Live Ableton Live should not send MIDI notes back to Sundog! Otherwise it might happen that these notes will trigger Sundog to instantly send new notes to Ableton as well, and the whole circle starts again. Please make sure that you don't create a nasty feedback loop with your MIDI connections. This way the plug-ins will always stay on the preset that you chose inside the DAW and not change their sounds from time to time. Important: I highly recommend to set all instrument numbers inside Sundog to "Off" if you work with synth plug-ins! Now all the armed tracks will respond to the channels that you have set in Box 1 before.īox 3: You can use different plug-ins or Live instruments in your channels - I use Sylenth1 here for example Make sure that you have clicked on the "I-O" button in Box 1b before, as you can see theseĬombo boxes only if you have activated that viewīox 2: If you Cmd-Click (Mac) / Ctrl-Click (Windows) the small recording markers you can arm multiple tracks at once. Please take a look at this image:īox 1: You have to set the Ableton Live tracks to different MIDI channels, so that each instrument will respond to separate MIDI note events. Then you have to "arm" the tracks of Live. See the example for Ableton Live on macOS below). macOS: Please follow the guide here: Windows: Please follow the guide here: īasically you set the MIDI Out of Sundog to the virtual MIDI cable, and the MIDI In of Live to the virtual MIDI cable as well (check the preferences in both programs. You will need a "virtual MIDI cable" to connect Sundog to Ableton Live.
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