----- Original Message ----- 
  
  
  Sent: Wednesday, December 19, 2007 10:23 
  PM
  Subject: Re: MIDI wind controllers
  
  Yeah, interesting thread. I use an old WX7. I like the fact that it has 
  moving keys on it. As someone who played sax before, that feels more familiar. 
  I tried an older EWI with the touch switches and it felt REALLY WEIRD to me. 
  But maybe you can get used to it. People who use the EWI say that once you get 
  used to the weird keys, it's possible to play faster than on a controller (or 
  a real horn!) with moving keys.
   
  Regarding the CC7 (volume) and CC2 (breath) messages: in MIDI there 
  is no difference between these other than the ID number of the controller. But 
  IIRC (don't have the WX7 handy), you can either have it send just CC2 
  or BOTH CC2 and CC7 (depending on a DIP switch setting). When it's 
  sending two messages every time, it might be slower. But CC2 by itself is 
  going to be the same speed as CC7 by itself.
   
  I saw an EWI4000 at NAMM last January and got to hold it, but wasn't 
  allowed to blow on it. It looked pretty cool. It is nice having the synth 
  built in and the sound editor on the computer. Kind of like a mini-Nord 
  Modular.
   
  For creating synth patches, I highly recommend setting the patch up so 
  that the breath pressure increases the cutoff of the filter and the amplitude 
  of the sound at the same time. This makes a HUGE difference in giving it a 
  more organic sound and adding to the expressiveness. All the pseudo-horn 
  sounds I do with the WX7 and Continuum are just analog-style waves with a 
  breath-sensitive filter and amplitude like that. Some of them also have more 
  static filters in line afterwards to try to sound like the body of a sax or 
  brass mutes. Most of this stuff should be possible with the EWI. I dunno if 
  the patches that come with it are any good. That is always a crap shoot!
   
  Anyway, here are some of my suggestions for programming wind 
sounds:
   
  
   
  A lot of the Continuum examples I did use very similar patches, since the 
  Continuum acts like a polyphonic wind controller. Finger pressure is used 
  instead of breath pressure. I've been getting nice results by using the 
  Continuum to drive old analog synths with very similar patch setups. Like in 
  the ContinuMoog examples here:
   
  
   
  Try it, it's fun!
   
  Mark Smart