THE SENSITIVE CZ ?! Unable to sell my CZ-1000 I decided to work at it in the hope that I could make it work for me. Normally in my studio an instrument must have velocity sensitivity and respond to MIDI volume control (continuous controller #7), and the CZ is simply dead in those respects. Or is it ? The volume of any patch is controlled by the level(s) of the DCA, the digi- tally controlled amplifier, while the patch's timbre (brightness) is control- led by the level(s) of the DCW, the digitally controlled waveshaper. Obviously then these (DCA & DCW) are the parameters to adjust in order to achieve the differences in volume and timbre which are normally associated with velocity sensitivity. But since the CZ's keyboard is *not* designed to respond to velo- city, these volume/timbre changes are unfortunately not dynamic. Or aren't they ? The CZ 101/1000 has three memory areas : the presets, the cartridge, and the internal. By storing only a very few patches into the cartridge and the inter- nal memories, and scaling those patches' DCA and DCW levels, I now have "sen- sitive" sounds available via program change (!). A typical set-up looks like this (in my machine) : patch=any patch DCA DCW memory location: 1 99 96 2 96 94 3 93 92 4 90 90 5 87 88 6 84 86 7 81 84 8 78 82 This scaling will yield rather subtle volume/timbre changes, though obviously the scaling can be enlarged or reduced to fit particular needs. If a RAM cart is used, up to 32 variations of a patch's output can be stored. This method should be of interest to anyone using the CZ primarily as a mul- ti-timbral instrument via MIDI sequencing, though some observations are in or- der. When I played a 4-part, 4-instrument sequence with a patch change per bar per instrument, the CZ stumbled and glitched pretty noticeably. Reducing the number of changes and "staggering" their entries solved that problem : the CZ seems able to handle no more than two coincident program changes at a time. My studio is already fit with a number of multi-timbral synths & samplers : why go to this trouble ? Because the CZ makes truly unique sounds, because it's here, and because I want to make it earn its keep. This method has re- vived my CZ : I hope it proves to be of some value to others. A note on the banks included with this text : DCA_1,2,3, & 4 are Patchmaster Plus banks for the CZ-101/1000, and are not compatible with any other editor/librarian. Sorry 'bout that. If you're using a PC or clone for MIDI and you need a superb librarian, I strongly recommend Voyetra's Patchmaster Plus. Only Club MIDI's Prolib rivals it, and Prolib lacks many of PM+'s most valuable features. The patches in the banks were created with the help of Mark Insero's excel- lent CZ-Edit, which is available as shareware on many MIDI bbs's. The only drawback to Mark's program is that it doesn't upload (it was originally de- signed for quick entry of text patches). However, it will download to both the internal *and* the cartidge memories. The adjustment/scaling of the DCA/DCW values might appear to be rather tedious, but with the help of keystroke mac- ros I reduced the whole process of programming/scaling/storing to mere min- utes. CZ-Edit had no problems with Borland's SuperKey. BTW, there are other e/l's for the PC\clones and the CZ, the most well-known being available from Dr.T's. One other note : I arranged a C major scale in 16th-notes at a tempo of about 140 bpm (in Sequencer Plus) and inserted a program change per note. The CZ flew right through them without glitching or missing a beat (this was a mono- phonic performance, i.e., only one instrument). It must be pointed out though that program change *will* cut short any notes sustained into the program change, so that MIDI volume swells and fades are still unavailable. If you have any comments re: this brief text, or if you have any other CZ tricks to share, drop me a line on MIDI-Net (IEMUG), MIDIum, or Illusions : I'm somewhat active on all of those fine MIDI bbs's. Dave Phillips 4/21/89