Access virus os4 用户手册

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ACCESS VIRUS OS4
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DUMP: The Sound in the Song
sisting of notes. For example, you 
can move a bulk dump to any posi-
tion in the arrangement. To assure 
that the Virus plays the song back 
using the right sounds, we recom-
mend that you position stored 
data prior to the song. Move all 
components of the actual song 
back so that you’re left with 
enough room to accommodate the 
dump prior to the song’s start posi-
tion. Then when you start the 
sequencer on the first bar, sound-
related data is sent to the Virus 
before the actual song begins. An 
individual sound dump is very 
short; a dump comprising a com-
plete memory bank will extend 
over several bars.
 
During a bulk dump, the Virus 
sends MIDI SysEx data to the com-
puter. If you encounter problems 
while recording a bulk dump, please 
check if your sequencer refuses to 
accept SysEx data due to one-sided 
filtering. You can check whether or 
not anything was recorded by tak-
ing a look at the Event or List editor 
of your sequencer. In this editor, 
MIDI data is displayed numerically 
instead of graphically; in a normal 
Note editor (Key Edit, Matrix Edit or 
the like) SysEx data is NOT visible. 
Once you’ve successfully recorded a 
dump, look for entries in the list 
that are labeled ”SysEx”.
The Virus lets you to send the 
entire memory content or just 
parts thereof to the sequencer. The 
most reliable solution is to transfer 
the entire memory (MIDI DUMP 
RX: Total). There is, however, a 
catch: Since a great deal of data is 
being transmitted (”Total”, after 
all, means all SINGLE programs, all 
MULTIs, and so forth), the dump is