Cubase 5 Workshop - The Key Editor
It appears deceptively simple, but delve beneath the surface and the Key Editor has some very useful tricks up its sleeve. Hollin Jones lifts the lid.

Cubase started life as a MIDI sequencer, and although it has matured beyond recognition since those early days, MIDI recording and editing are still among the core features that make it such a great program, the others including audio recording and editing, plug-ins and, perhaps less tangibly, its friendly interface. Anyone who has worked with MIDI in Cubase will almost certainly have come across the Key Editor, but many users merely scratch the surface of what it can do, limiting their interaction with it to simply deleting notes or dragging them around. In truth, it’s a remarkably powerful tool that bears further inspection, so we’re going to look at how you can get the most out of it.
This feature first appeared in Music Tech Magazine issue 79
Filed under
Software Workshops,
Cubase Tutorials,
Features
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