Casio ctk 710 songs how to#
Robert, I think sometimes new members have trouble figuring out how to start a new topic of their own, so they post in an existing topic instead. PIANIST,353,RvSwanee,Old Folks at Home (Swanee River),Stephen Foster WALTZ & TRAD,323,WrldNeed,What the World Needs Now Is Love WALTZ & TRAD,322,DanubeWz,The Blue Danube Waltz R&B,240,BlueHill,Blueberry Hill,Fats DominoĬOUNTRY,243,BlueSong,Song Sung Blue,Neil DiamondĮNTERTAINMENT,296,RedRdolf,Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer OLDIES,159,Hppy2gtr,So Happy Together,The TurtlesĭANCE & DISCO,176,FevrNite,Saturday Night FeverĭANCE & DISCO,193,NgtRythm,Rhythm of the Night ROCK & ROLL,145,CrocRock,Crocodile Rock,Elton John POP BALLAD,92,Red Lady,Red Roses for a Blue Lady POP Classics,85,How2Know,How Will I Know,Whitney Houston MODERN POP,43,SwftShke,Shake It Off,Taylor Swift I've made suggestions for a few of the songs, but they're just guesses based on the cryptic names.ĪLL TIME HITS,28,WiteShde,A Whiter Shade of Pale
The new entries are given below, but someone should go through and verify that I didn't leave any out or include any that were already in there.
Casio ctk 710 songs full#
I tried to make a list of the new entries by comparing the PSR-E453's full list against the work that was done before. Only the new entries still need to be deciphered- although it's a good idea to verify whether the older entries were deciphered correctly or not. Most of the Music Database entries are the same from one model of a given line to the next, so the work that was done on the PSR-E433 Music Database song names should apply to the entries in the PSR-E453 Music Database.
The final test will be whether the cryptic Music Database name seems to correspond with the decrypted Music Finder name. The Main Voice, Dual On/Off flag, and Dual Voice may also be helpful in finding possible matches. The tempo may be a critical factor, since the names of the song categories, styles, and style categories might vary from one keyboard model to another. Some of these won't matter, and you'll notice that they're always the same, but it wouldn't hurt to include them in the spreadsheet.Īfter you've gone through this process for each entry in the Music Database, you can try to find similar Music Finder entries by comparing the tempo, song category, style, style category, style variation, etc. The same goes for ARPEGGIO, HARMONY, and DSP. I'm not sure whether SPLIT will ever be turned on, but you can make a note of it as well. You'll also want to look at the LCD screen to see if DUAL is turned on or off. The hardest one will be the Main Voice, since it isn't listed in the function menu, but if you press the VOICE button it will show the name of the Main Voice with a number of 000 (the OTS voice number). Some of the functions won't matter, but you want to look at the ones for the three voices, the effects, and other parameters that control the sound (such as Arpeggio and Harmony). This is the part that will take the longest, because you're going to want to scroll through the functions to see what each one is set to, add a column to the spreadsheet, and note the function's value in the spreadsheet. When you press it the second time it will change back to the Main variation.) Add a Variation column to the spreadsheet, and note the variation in the spreadsheet (MAIN A). (The first time you press INTRO/ENDING/rit. button twice to see which Main variation is selected. You might also want to add a Style Category column to the spreadsheet, look up the style in the Data List, and note the style category in the spreadsheet (Ballad). Add a Style column to the spreadsheet, and note the style in the spreadsheet (035: LoveSong). Now press the STYLE button to see what the Style is. Add a Tempo column to the spreadsheet, and note the tempo in the spreadsheet (070). Now press the TEMPO button once to see what the Tempo is. Next, select the first Music Database entry on the keyboard (on the PSR-EW400 this is number 001, "Jude Hey," which is actually pretty easy to guess). However, there are probably a lot of entries in the Music Database which match up to similar entries in Music Finder so if those matching entries can be identified, we can use the decoded Music Finder names to identify the Music Database entries.įirst, create a spreadsheet of the Music Database entries, showing the entry number, the category, and the cryptic song name for each entry. Unfortunately, the PSR-E models have an internal Music Database, and they can't load or read Music Finder files like the PSR-S models can.