14-06-25, 22:05 -
Hi Soumello,
The min/max note or keyboard range has a complete different function. It's a bit hidden but documented.
The easiest way to do what you want is to create duplicate of your samples with only the C4/C5 range of samples and create a "silent" sample
This sample needs to be defined on the right distance from the C4/C5 range. The right distance is where the calculatiion of missing notes switches from your C4/C5 samples to the silent one.
Samplerbox interpolates, so it will be somewhere out of the C4/C5 range - high in C3 and low in C6 - depending on your lowest C4 sample and highest C5 sample.
A second way is to create keyboard splits with notemapping. There is a learning curve (been there, done that..), but imho it's a better approach and saves the duplication of part of your sample set.
The min/max note or keyboard range has a complete different function. It's a bit hidden but documented.
The easiest way to do what you want is to create duplicate of your samples with only the C4/C5 range of samples and create a "silent" sample
This sample needs to be defined on the right distance from the C4/C5 range. The right distance is where the calculatiion of missing notes switches from your C4/C5 samples to the silent one.
Samplerbox interpolates, so it will be somewhere out of the C4/C5 range - high in C3 and low in C6 - depending on your lowest C4 sample and highest C5 sample.
A second way is to create keyboard splits with notemapping. There is a learning curve (been there, done that..), but imho it's a better approach and saves the duplication of part of your sample set.