FADER WAYPhilip Rees C16 MIDI ControllerPublished in SOS January 2001 Reviews : MIDI Controller
With a history that spans nearly 15 years, Philip Rees are one of the great survivors of the British music technology industry. While other small companies making useful peripherals have fallen by the wayside, Philip Rees have continued to manufacture their distinctive red-and-black liveried MIDI problem-solvers. Their product line has ranged from MIDI mergers, switchers and multiple 'thru' units to tape synchronisers, MIDI line drivers and MIDI-CV interfacing, one or more of which can be seen in many a home or project studio (there are six scattered about in ours). The average price of these neat little gizmos is well under £100 (though prices go as low as £13), they usually have built-in power supplies (if power is required) and when treated with a modicum of care they seem to last and last (they're guaranteed for five years in any case). The latest device to join the Philip Rees family is one for which there seems to be ever-growing demand: a hardware MIDI controller. Such boxes are nothing new -- they've been around for years and their usefulness has always been acknowledged -- but a handful of factors have almost certainly influenced their recent huge rise in popularity. The first is the growth in the use of computer-based musical equipment, including sequencers, digital recording programs, software synths and samplers. This brings us closer to the all-software studio, but whatever the relative merits and demerits of this development, there can be few people who'd rather mess about with a mouse than have access to a set of intuitive, hands-on knobs or faders. Almost equal in importance must be the widespread use of General MIDI/XG/GS sound modules that don't have their own physical controls. These instruments usually have a fully functioning synthesis engine -- all they're missing is the knobs to access it easily. Finally, and crucially, there's been a dramatic reduction in the cost of adding a hardware controller to your setup -- it's always difficult to get hard-up musicians to part with much cash for something that doesn't actually make a noise. Amazingly, the early MIDI controller boxes from the '80s could cost as much as £1000, and though they eventually dropped in price, their cost got stuck at around the £3-400 mark. Then, in 1998, the Keyfax Phat Boy broke through that barrier and the £150 MIDI controller was born. It offered knobs instead of faders, was essentially non-programmable, and could control a maximum of 13 parameters at a time, but it was compact, easy to use, featured control templates for GM/XG/GS synths and the popular AWE soundcards, and didn't break the bank. Success was pretty much guaranteed. What's On The Box? Now that we're thoroughly up to date, where does the C16 fit into all this? Well, it's going head-to-head with the Phat Boy in terms of price (now available in a MkII version -- see review in SOS October 2000), but it's not offering exactly the same approach. For a start, instead of knobs the C16 has faders; quite neat-looking 60mm sliders which are a bit 'sticky' in their travel, but not unpleasant to use. And it crams in 16 of them, allowing 16 MIDI parameters to be controlled at the same time. Comparing well with the Phat Boy II's six, the C16 has 98 control templates, known as Targets in Philip Rees-speak, which cover different synths, synth types and soundcards, plus some general setups. Finally, it has two user-definable setups which let you assign any desired MIDI controller or SysEx string to each fader, rather than being obliged to tell your synth or software to respond to the fader box's fixed knob or fader assignments (not all synths are flexible enough for the latter to work). Physically, the C16 has the Philip Rees family look and colours. It measures nine by five inches, packs its faders as close together as they can be while still remaining usable, and features a handy scribble strip along its front edge. Labelling The back panel is simple: a MIDI In connector plus an Out/Thru (both helpfully labelled upside down as well as right way up, so that they can be read while you're peering over the back of the unit), plus the two-pin mains inlet (yes, the C16 scores more brownie points for its internal power supply). We don't usually talk about the underside of a piece of kit, but on this occasion, it's worth doing, because an abridged Target list is affixed there, giving slider assignments for a selection of the most popular instruments. Hard At It: Using the C16 The C16 has a number of uses in the modern studio, including easy programming of synth sounds, real-time control of hardware and software synth parameters (creating filter sweeps, altering envelope settings, and so on, perhaps as a sequence plays), and hardware control of software mixers, where onscreen faders are operated by hardware faders. For anyone using a GM/XG/GS sound module, or one of the instruments covered by the many preset templates, getting up and running with the C16 is simply a matter of con Operation is similarly straightforward if you're using one of the general-purpose templates, such as the Quick MIDI Mixer. This template lets you use the C16's MIDI channel selector knob to switch between controlling volume, pan, reverb send level, chorus send level, variation effect send, expression and balance for 16 MIDI channels. Other general templates offer aftertouch control, mod wheel, pitch-bend, and so on, again for 16 MIDI channels. XG/GS synth users will be happy to see the two specific effect-editing templates the C16 offers. Target Practice Where the Target list doesn't include exactly what you're looking for, there are two options: if your synth allows it, you can remap the controller information generated by any C16 template to parameters of your choice; or you can create a whole new template to be stored in one of the C16's two user slots. GM/XG/GS FADER ASSIGNMENTS Wish List The latter can be done in one of two ways. The easy way, which currently is only available to Windows PC owners, is to use the C16 Editor software (which was at pre-release v0.91 as we were writing this review). From what we can tell (we couldn't run it, as we're Mac users), this simple dedicated SysEx editor takes the pain out of telling the C16 which fader should do which job. It appears quite clear and straightforward, and also seems to offer a librarian function for saving custom templates. The harder way to do the same job is via non-dedicated software, such as a sequencer program that allows SysEx data to be edited. In this case, you would create a SysEx event defining the parameter assignment for each fader. The necessary SysEx tags for a given synth's parameters can be found in the MIDI implementation at the back of the synth's manual (shame the C16's odd and smudgily-reproduced manual doesn't provide more help for those who need to take this route!). When a template is complete, hitting 'play' on the sequencer sends the SysEx data to the C16. If this all sounds too much like hard work, Mac users can hang on for the promised Mac version of the C16 Editor. Using the C16 to control sequencer software mixer controls depends very much upon the sequencer. Some allow incoming MIDI controllers to be freely assigned to mixer elements -- level and pan, for example -- in the way that Cakewalk for the PC does. If your software doesn't let you do this, the Quick MIDI Mixer template might work; otherwise, you may find something amongst the generic templates. We discovered that template 24, transmitting on MIDI channel 16, controls the level faders for the first 16 channels (of any type) in the Pro Tools LE MIDI + audio software that comes with the Digidesign Digi 001 system. This is useful, since there's no easy way to assign controllers to faders and pan pots (Pro Tools uses dedicated drivers to talk directly to hardware controllers). The 001 has 24 audio channels, but by moving blocks of tracks around, one could use the C16 to control an entire Session. Philip Rees are also making new templates available via their web site; two of the most recent at the time of writing provide control over level and pan for the first 16 channels of the audio mixer in Steinberg's Cubase VST. Slider Rules The C16 is a really good addition to the Philip Rees range that also brings a welcome bit of competition to the budget end of the MIDI controller market. It's indisputably more flexible than the Phat Boy, offering programmability which the latter doesn't have, as well as a much larger number of preset templates (with more to come via the web site). It's possible that some people will prefer Phat Boy-style knobs to faders, especially for controlling synths, but faders can be used for any sort of parameter alteration and certainly feel better for mixing. The C16 isn't up to the level of Kenton's rather pricier Control Freak, say, in terms of sophistication, and if you don't have a computer, you'll never be able to access its user templates, but let's not be too picky for 150 quid! The bottom line is that the C16 is a great, easy-to-use little box which can enormously improve the productivity and enjoyment of working with MIDI gear. Published in SOS January 2001 | Saturday 4th July 2009 July 2009
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