Mike, trying to emulate real players by using midi has been the holy grail of midi for 25 years. It's very difficult. The latest and expensive (like $4,000) keyboards have certain articulation patches that are multi-layered and respond to touch. To begin to take advantage of that starts with you being a very good keyboard player with good control of your fingers. Roland has a thing where you hold a chord and hit a button with your other hand and it gives you different versions of a correct guitar strum for example. The Tyros 4 has a similar thing on some of the horns and the new Korg Pa3X has some really good ones too. Trying to do this at home on your computer when you've already said you're not a midi expert is setting yourself up for a long and frustrating learning process. You've first got to give up Biab and use a good sequencer that has all these controls available, then you have to use expensive synth software that allows for that and finally you have to understand all this as theory and be a good enough player to take advantage of it. This is the primary reason the Real Tracks were developed but of course we all know you can't change the individual notes to fit whatever you're trying to do. What is previously recorded is what you get but they sound great. Limited but great.

Bob


Biab/RB latest build, Win 11 Pro, Ryzen 5 5600 G, 512 Gig SSD, 16 Gigs Ram, Steinberg UR22 MkII, Roland Sonic Cell, Kurzweil PC3, Hammond SK1, Korg PA3XPro, Garritan JABB, Hypercanvas, Sampletank 3, more.