Roland Piano 用户手册

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页码 214
135
Recording Songs
Recording Songs
Saving a Recorded Song on 
Disk
A song you record is temporarily stored in internal memory. A song 
in internal memory will be lost when the power is turned off or 
when you load another song. If you want to keep the song, you must 
save it to disk.
1.
Into the disk drive, insert the disk on which you will save the 
song.
2.
Press [MENU] to access the Menu window.
3.
Use
or
to select “Song Edit,” and then press [8 
(Select)].
The Song Edit screen appears.
4.
Press [2 (Save)].
The Select Command window appears.
fig.10-13_50
5.
Use
or
to select the format in which the song will be 
saved.
Save Song File:
 The song will be saved to disk in MRC Pro song 
format. The settings of the currently selected multitimbre/
performance will also be saved with the data. An extension of 
“.SVQ” will be added automatically.
Save SMF (Format 0):
 The song will be converted into a Format 0 
Standard MIDI File (in which all sequencer data is saved in a single 
phrase track), and saved to disk. An extension of “.MID” will be 
added automatically.
Save SMF (Format 1):
 The song will be converted into a Format 1 
Standard MIDI File (in which the sequencer data is saved in multiple 
phrase tracks), and saved to disk. An extension of “.MID” will be 
added automatically.
• The extension will be “.MID” for both “Save SMF (Format 0)” 
and “Save SMF (Format 1).” These two cannot be distinguished.
• When you save the data using “Save Song File,” the settings of 
the patches and rhythm sets assigned to each part of the 
multitimbre/performance will not be saved.
• When you save the data using “Save Song File,” the 
multitimbre/performance settings at the time you saved the data 
will be saved. This means that if the multitimbre/performance 
was modified midway through the song, and you save 
immediately after recording, the song will start with the 
multitimbre/performance sounds that were selected at the time 
of saving. If you modify the multitimbre/performance during 
the song, use the Microscope window to record the desired bank 
select and program number data (corresponding to the 
multitimbre/performance settings from which you will start) at 
the beginning of the song (p. 156).
• Even if you save using “Save Song File,” the song will not use 
the correct sounds when played back on a MRC Pro sequencer 
other than the Fantom. In order to make the song play back with 
the correct songs, you must record the appropriate bank select 
and program number in the song.
6.
After specifying the format in which the song will be saved, 
press [8 (Select)].
The Save **** window appears.
fig.10-14_50
The window title will depend on the format in which the song is 
being saved.
7.
Assign a file name (up to 8 characters). Press [5 (Name)], 
and use the Name window that appears to assign a file 
name.
For details on assigning a name, refer to 
If a song name has already been assigned to the song, the first 
eight characters of the song name will be used to automatically 
assign a file name. If no song name has been assigned, 
“SONG_000” will be assigned automatically.
If you want to view a list of the files stored on disk, press [6 
(List)]. To select a file name from this list, move the cursor to the 
desired file and press [8 (Select)].
8.
Press [8 (Execute)] to execute the operation.
• If you assign a file name that is the same as the name of a file 
already existing on the disk, then attempt to save it, a message of 
“File “****” Already Exists! Over Write OK?” will appear. If you 
want to overwrite the existing file, press [7 (OK)]. If you decide 
to cancel without saving, press [8 (Cancel)].
• If you attempt to save data to a disk that has not been formatted 
by the Fantom, a message of “Unformatted Disk” will appear. 
Please format the disk on the Fantom (p. 191).
File Name and Song Name
MRC Pro songs and Standard MIDI Files have a song name in 
addition to a file name. The file name is used to distinguish 
between files, and must be assigned when you save a file. It will 
help you manage songs if you use the file name to distinguish 
between types of song, and use the song name to assign a title.