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Indian South-Step MiDi KONTAKT The instruments in this library are from south India, mainly from Tamil Nadu. In general they produce a drone sound when played with the left hand and tremolo effect when played with the right hand. The drones are composed of two or three notes which often have a common fourth note in them. The tremolos usually use a string which is tuned to up to five divisions above the tonic note. They produce sounds that have been described as "somber" and "sonorous. The main problem with south Indian step is that there are few of them. This is because the Indian music tradition is not as deeply rooted in Western music as, say, the Persian or Arab world from which many of the instruments from this region came. There are a smaller number of solo instruments which have a tradition going back to classical texts on South Indian music and some of these have come to be distinguished by places or regions, such as "Madras" or "Kerala". However, there are a lot more pan musicians who play the drone system but without any melody playing instruments. The drone system has been used as an accompanying voice for vocal dances and musical groupings for centuries. There is a South Indian rhythm called "South Indian In A" which has been used as a drone for over 400 years. This rhythm is the simplest of the South Indian rhythms and has been played with any number of percussion instruments. Today it is generally known as the “South Indian Rhythm” or simply “South Indian”. It was composed by Purandara Dasa (1480–1564), who was an important composer of Carnatic music (a style of South Indian classical music). There is a story that he was under a tree when he heard the rhythm and that he then composed this music using his karatals (a kind of hourglass shaped copper percussion instrument) as an illustration. The south Indian style of playing is to play three sounds with the right hand and one sound with the left. It seems that the South Indians were both adept and disinclined at coming up with melodies. The term “miDi” means midi. A midi file refers to a musical composition which has been saved in a computer as a digital recording and can be played by any sound system which reads midi files. A miDi file can be recorded on a midi system which is connected to a computer. Once the file has been recorded, it can be played by any sound system compatible with the midi controller. The standard midi controller is a keyboard which also has a bank of buttons and knobs. It can send up to 16 separate channels of midi data which correspond to the separate notes being played. Each channel has its own pitch bend and modulation wheel control. The controllers are connected together via a cable called an “MIDI-thru” or simply “thru” that makes multiple controllers appear as one device on the other end of the cable. cfa1e77820
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