While EWI USB is easy and fun to use, it’s also powerful, flexible, and-most importantly-reliable enough for use on stage and in the studio by professional musicians. Akai Professional designed the EWI USB to give wind players the expressive musical capabilities previously found only in much more expensive instruments.ĮWIs are a great choice for wind players looking to make music electronically. Akai Professional’s decades of experience in wind and electronic musical instruments are rolled into Akai Professional’s most user-friendly-and most affordable-EWI controller ever.įor over 20 years, Akai Professional has studied the art of playing saxophone, clarinet, oboe, bassoon, and other traditional wind instruments and developed electronic wind instruments that enable wind players to enjoy the same expressive control as in an acoustic instrument. The Akai Professional EWI USB electronic wind controller is for musicians seeking an easy-to-play, easy-to-use instrument. Information - Concerts, News,FAQs, Archives. Organs - Electronic (B3 etc.), Pipe, Theatre. Who's Who - Professional Pianists on Piano World
Member Recordings - Non Classical Pianist CornerĮVENTS! Piano Concerts, Recitals, Competitions.įun Stuff! - Parties, Tours, Projects & More.įorum Members Parties, Tours, Cruises, & M. MY NEW PIANO or KEYBOARD! - Share Your Story! I does not quite explain why midi is okay with a midi cable, but the coding could be somewhat different, it doesn't rule it out for USB devices however.ĭigital Pianos - Electronic Pianos - Synths &a. I could be wrong but that's what I suspect is happening here in some way.
If the device is lost thereafter that's it, you are done, then you can go into preferences or options, whatever the software offers, and force a scan (as you did), or restart the application will achieve the same. I think this is what Aria Player does too and a lot of Host software, i.e. Cubase works like this also, unless you go into options and scan for new devices. If the application only checks/polls for USB devices at startup it will only work if the piano is already on. I suspect, hence you can get away with the switching on/off issue. If the engine polls once in a while, while running to see if any USB devices have been plugged in it will pick them up automatically at any time, this is how pteq works. I would guess this is simply a programming choice developers make with the host software in relation to windows lower level API. I can keep Pianoteq running in the background forever and turn the DP off and on several times and it just works. Note that Pianoteq 6 does not have this issue. Is there a way to set it up such that this doesn't happen? i turn off and on the piano 5 times a day and would like CFX to just keep recognizing it. I have to go to Tools -> Preferences and then unselect Kawai MIDI device, select it again and then press OK. Now, if I turn the piano on after that, Garritan CFX does not recognize the MIDI device. Sometimes, I also manually turn the piano off. If I stop playing the piano for 30 minutes, it automatically turns itself off. When I start Garritan CFX, it recognizes Kawai MIDI device just fine.
Specifically: The digital piano is connected to the PC via USB cable.
I am having an issue with the MIDI device recognition after piano is turned off and then on again - without exiting Garritan CFX standalone player. I am trying to get it work with Kawai CA67 digital piano so that it is always available 24/7 whenever I turn Kawai DP on. I am using the latest Garritan CFX (full version) standalone player on Windows 10.