![]() ![]() For anyone else wondering what a working ReaKontrol looks like, a nice popup window informing you that ReaKontrol has been loaded will appear upon launching Reaper.Įventually I found that there were no ReaKontrol dylib files where it seems they should be (~/Library/Application\ Support/REAPER/UserPlugins/). Not knowing what "working" actually looked like, I wasn't sure what the problem was. I am new to ReaKontrol (and Reaper for MIDI in general) and on an M1 Mac and I was not able get it working via ReaPack regardless of Rosetta settings, though I saw no errors on install. I'll give it a go and let you know how it works out. In short: Glissandos and "things of that nature" can all be done with a little elbow grease. For fancy value conversions another great free plugin is talagan's JS MIDI CC Mapper X which allows you to edit MIDI response conversion curves, filtering etc. But you could also work with built in stuff like JS Midi CC to Note On/Off. An excellent free plugin for these purposes is midiConverter3 from piz. Let's say you want to map the CC11 (values 0-127) to notes with the same values to play a glissando: Pick a plugin like that converts/maps MIDI CC to a note value and you are all set. In Reaper you can map that CC to something else. You can assign whatever CC you want to the touchstrip via the Komplete Kontrol software (see NI manual) - I always keep it at the default. on the S-series keyboards the touchstrip outputs CC11 (values 0-127) as a default. However, it is unrelated to ReaKontrol, and requires you to faff around a little bit with plugins. This may have already been discussed, but I did a search within the post and didn't find anything. ![]() Similar to how the Maschine Jam touchstrips can be used to play glissandos and things of that nature? Is there any way to map the touch strips to play notes? ![]()
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