![]() ![]() Or, if the goal is to work with standard soundfonts, just stop using non-standard mappings within Cubase. Or, just find a soundfont that uses the non-standard mapping you elected to use. Then do the same for every other pitch you need to change. Right-click one note that uses pitch 77, Select / More, Same pitch, OK - now they are all selected, and you can use the arrow keys to move them to the correct pitch. ![]() But if Cubase lacks that capability, you can make MuseScore (which wasn't really designed for MIDI manipulation) do it for you with some effort. Best if Cubase can be configured to remap on export - that seems like a pretty basic thing for any program that specializes in MIDI to support. If I open Addictive Drums 2, either as standalone or fx-plugin in the DAW, and go to the 'Map window', then highlight the 'Hihat' selector in the middle of the screen, and then with my computer mouse click 'HH Foot Close' midi note at the top of the list, then it sounds normal, like a hihat should sound when closing it with the foot. ![]() If so, then what you need isn't a new mapping - you need new pitches in your score. Hmm, are you saying you don't actually have a soundfont that uses this mapping? That is, you created a MIDI track using a non-standard mapping using Ciubase, but you don't actually have a soundfont that uses that same mapping? ![]()
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