The Worship Keys Podcast
If you play piano, organ, synths, pads, or any keys instrument for worship ministry or the music industry, you are in the right place! Nashville-based worship keys player, Carson Bruce, interviews a variety of different musicians every week.
Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned pro, this is the podcast for you to learn and feel inspired to enhance both your technical playing skills and to also gain spiritual encouragement while being in a local church congregation.
New episodes release every Wednesday! Reach out directly to Carson on Instagram or email: carson@theworshipkeys.com.
The Worship Keys Podcast
How to Make Piano Sample Library: MainStage Template & Library Demo
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Carson Bruce wraps up the piano sample library tutorial series by showing how to move a finished Logic Pro X Sampler patch into MainStage for live performance. He walks through locating and copying the patch from the Logic user library, pasting it into the MainStage patches folder, and loading it into MainStage. He also demonstrates how the patch works in perform mode and explains how MainStage allows you to control and solo different mic and noise channels like CAD mics, Rode stereo, close mics, pedal noise, and release triggers to customize the sound.
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Welcome to the Worship Keys podcast. My name is Carson Bruce. We talk all things music theory, gear, industry, and ministry for your worship keys playing. I'd like to thank Aerospace Audio for being a sponsor of this episode. They create unique incredible high quality atmospheric drone pads to be used for your worship services, productions, songwriting sessions, whatever it may be. They have an analog physical drone pedal that they call atmosphere. There's actually a version three out. They also have a MIDI end capability, so you can work in tandem with Ableton Live or any other dog that you have to be able con to control everything through that ecosystem. Or if not the physical analog pedal. They also have an iOS app that you can run the pad straight from your iPhone or iPad. It's called Aero Pads. Definitely check them out, aerospace audio.com and let's get into today's episode. Welcome back on how to Make a Piano Sample Library. My name is Carson, and if you have not watched any of my previous videos, feel free to go back and do that. We are here at the final tutorial videos on how to actually build your piano sample library from scratch. So we have recorded our samples. We have edited our samples, exported them, programmed them here into Logic Pro X sampler plugin here, and we've made an instrument. So now I'm gonna talk about how to get that patch into main stage to play it live as well. So once you've built your instrument, which I have right here, and you already have it saved here on the lower left, we went ahead and saved BC. Sample, you can name it whatever you want to demo in your instrument folder. I'm gonna replace that. Then what you wanna do is go back to where you have it saved. I'm just gonna search for it in my Mac here. There it is. So BC sample, demo patch. What I'm going to do. I am gonna take that command C I'm gonna copy that. I'm gonna go to my main stage folder where I have all, where I keep my main stage stuff. I'm gonna paste that in to where I can see in this folder that I have BC sample demo patch right there. So open up main stage here. Go to adding a new patch, user your patches, and when you scroll down, you should see BC sample demo. There it is. So if you go to perform mode, there we go. It's playing. You probably can't hear it. But it works. There it is. There's the pedal. It has all of the different layers right here, and if you go back, it, it all depends on how you have main stage set up. Um, this is my particular template, special template, but you should be able to load it up no matter what kind of template you have, anyway, so then you can control your individual channels. Over here to the right, you got your CAD mics, the roads, the 30 sevens, the close, the pedal noise, and the release trigger. So again, when you play the piano. You can, if you don't want certain noises, you can adjust them however you like. If you only like the road stereo up here, you can just literally solo that out or solo that in conjunction with the pedal and the release trigger. And that can be your sample, but it's just as easy as that. Go to Logic, save it on the bottom left. Wherever you save that into your user patch library of logic, you just need to copy and paste it into your main stage library, and then you can easily pull it up to be played within main stage. I hope that's helpful for you guys. And good luck making your own piano sample library as well. I. Um, ah ,U, um Ah, ah, Oh, ah Untertitelung. BR Untertitelung. BR 2018 a r uh Why I wrote these អនំ សុចយcakes��chetះដែរបាស់តៅកើមនៅ помៅជាំមឱ៊ស់។