Roland KF-90 Manual Do Utilizador

Página de 196
101
Chapter 4 Recording and Saving the Performance
Chapter 4
Redoing a Recording
Redoing a recording involves specifying a Track button you want to record 
over and then recording over again.
When you select a Track button and record over a track that has already 
been recorded, the newly recorded performance occupies a position 
extending from the location where you started recording to where you 
stopped recording.
1.
Using the Bwd [
] and Fwd [
] buttons, move to the 
measure where you wish to start recording.
Press the Reset [
] button at the beginning of the song.
2.
Press the Rec [
] button.
The Rec [
] button’s indicator lights up.
The 5 Track screen appears.
To stop recording, press the Stop [
] button.
3.
Touch the Track button for the track you want to record over.
<
> will appear above the selected Track button.
The Rec [
] button and Play [
] button indicators will flash, and the KF-
90 will be ready for recording.
4.
Begin recording.
If you redo a recording with Automatic Accompaniment, specify a chord in 
the left-hand section of the keyboard, or press the [Start/Stop] button. 
If you don’t use automatic accompaniment, press the [Sync/Reset] button to 
extinguish the indicator, and then press the Play [
] button.
The mark <
> changes <
>.
5.
To stop recording, press the Stop [
] button.
To record the ending over again, press the Intro/Ending [1] or [2] button.
With songs in the KF-90's 
internal memory, the Track 
buttons are shown when 
the Rec [
] button is 
pressed.
For information on the 
Track buttons, take a look 
at “What is a Track 
Button?” (p. 97).
If you want to erase a 
previous performance 
before recording over it, 
take a look at “Erasing the 
Sound Recorded at Specific 
Track Buttons” (p. 102).
The song’s tempo is 
determined when the song 
is first recorded. Even 
when each track is 
recorded over with the 
tempo changed, the song is 
played back at the tempo 
selected when the song was 
first recorded. To change 
the tempo of a song that 
has already been recorded, 
refer to “Changing a Song’s 
Basic Tempo” (p. 122).