Ketron Sd4 User Manual

Posted : adminOn 3/9/2018
Ketron Sd4 User Manual Average ratng: 6,6/10 7168reviews

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Review: Ketron SD2 Orchestral Wizard Hey everybody, I recently finished up a review of the Ketron SD2 Orchestral Wizard for CMC, the company that distributes Ketron in the US ( ). (They were interested in how well the unit integrates with SONAR, and so they tapped me for a beta-test.) My interest in the unit was already piqued thanks to CJ's thread, so I jumped on it. With the review now done and given the proper blessings, I'm posting what I found right back here at my second home. (Before moving on, I do wish to give credit to CJ and others for their posts. I do not intend by any means to steal any thunder from the other thread; rather, my intentions are just to report what I found, and maybe provide some additional information that may help some fellow SONAR users who own, or are interested in owning, the Ketron SD2.) Also, in keeping with the spirit of this forum, I should say that I am not affiliated with Ketron or CMC in any official capacity. All that said, here we go.

Ketron Sd4 User Manual

Testing setup: Cakewalk SONAR 5 Professional Edition software, DAW (MSI Neo2 Plat, AMD64X2 4800+, Terratec EWS88D), Novation ReMote 61SL controller, M-Audio MIDIsport 4x4 MIDi interface, Ketron SD2 Orchestral Wizard Module, Fostex VM-200 digital mixer, Hafler M-5 monitors w/sub. Kanstul Meha Serial Numbers here. I opened up the SD2 box, and I was immediately surprised at how small it was. I saw the pictures beforehand, of course, but holding it in my hand, I realized that (like others had also commented) it was only slightly bigger than a stomp box.

Still, it did feel ruggedly built, like it would stand up pretty well to road use. After reading the included manual, making the needed hookups and checking basic routing (MIDI In and Audio Line Out), I went to the Ketron website (as the manual recommended) and downloaded all that they had for the SD2. The downloads included the Cakewalk Instrument Definition ('.INS') file, drum maps, and MIDI drum loops. Matlab License Number Activation Key here. It also included some Cakewalk Studioware to drive the 'Digital Drawbars' organ function. The INS imported into SONAR with nary a hitch. Ketron did a good job on the INS file. For those of you not as familiar with MIDI hardware synths, the Instrument Definition file gives SONAR (and for that matter, Cakewalk sequencers in general) direct mappings to patches and banks by name, right from inside the MIDI track.

Basically, patch/bank changes are a cinch in SONAR once you have the.INS file loaded, and it's really hard afterward to go back to referencing/entering program changes by number. I then started to do what I do with most new synths, just browsing through, auditioning the factory sounds. This is usually a fairly quick affair with most GM synths (seriously, how many of them does it take before you totally memorize the GM patch map?), but not so with this unit.

More times than not, I found myself stopping at a patch to jam for a while. These sounds have a way of just leaping out of the box and shaking you up.

They have the sort of slap-you-at-first-blush quality that makes for quick production work. There's at least one (often several) immediately-usable quality brasses, woodwinds, solo and orchestral strings, guitars, and keyboards. And that's just the first bank. Like several others have commented here, many of these sounds could stand up alongside some much more expensive hardware synths. I think those Italians really did their homework on these sample sets (and I don't think I'm being biased just because I'm Italian ).