Hey Jonathan! Love this, thanks for taking the time to make this video about the Sunday Keys App! With your permission, we would love to use this video in some of our marketing materials, would that be okay?
Hi! I have not experienced that myself. But I’ve also not spent tons of time at the keys myself to maybe have those kinds of issues. But even from running audio at the board, haven’t felt that happen.
@@braveheartbraveheart78 sorry I missed your first comment. The iPad in this video was a basic iPad Air. Ran about $350. The Arturia is around the same cost for the 88 key model. Beyond those 2 items you need a usb-c hub that has 2 standard usb ports and a usb-c power port, and also for audio out I used a presonus audio box for an audio interface which is $100. But you could also use the headphone out on the iPad or usb-c hub with a headphone to dual xlr cable. That works too but the audio interface will give you a clearer sound. There are some links to the keys and audio box in the description. The Sunday sounds website says it will run on as old as a base 6th gen iPad that can run iPad os 14. They recommend an M1 iPad and newer for best results.
Yes you can assign the pads and all the buttons within the Sunday Sounds app. With the keyboard connected to the app, click the 3 lines in the top right corner of the app. Then click "midi learn". You will then be able to tap each parameter you want to assign and then push the button or move the fader on the keyboard that you want to assign it to and it will connect. I am about to release a video on this exact thing soon. Side note, on the Arturia, the drum pads are mapped via the keyboard software to play a note. To get rid of that, you have to clear it by using the arturia midi control software. I just did it myself. A little more convoluted to explain in a comment here though.
@@lekeje So I will do my best to type it out. If you don't already have it, here is the link to download the midi control center from Arturia. dl.arturia.net/products/mccu/soft/MIDI_Control_Center__1_16_2_79.pkg Once you have it open and your keyboard connected to the software, click on the drum pad you are wanting to program. Information for that pad will show up at the bottom. There is a drop down menu called mode that probably has "MIDI Note" selected. Click that and select "Off". That will turn off any existing midi commands programmed to that button. You then need to click "Save As" and save a user template. Whatever name you want. Last, in the "Device Memories" section, selected one of the memories and click the button "store to". That will load what you have done to the keyboard. You can then close the control center and then go back to Sunday Sounds and program that button to what you want and you won't here a note play when you push the button. Hope that makes some semblance of sense in text form. Literally making the video on all that this afternoon, but hopefully my text will get it done for you. Thanks!
@@JonathanHeadley Tried a different method. Instead of setting it to “off” I put it on “switch control” then “unassigned” and it worked perfectly fine now. Thanks a lot for your help!
This is just the perfect video. Thank you
Thank you so much for an excellent video
How to purchase bro
Hey Jonathan! Love this, thanks for taking the time to make this video about the Sunday Keys App! With your permission, we would love to use this video in some of our marketing materials, would that be okay?
Hi! I really appreciate it. You're more than welcome to use it. Love you all's service and recommend it all the time to people!
@@JonathanHeadley Thank you Jonathan! Appreciate your support as well!
nice video, what laptop stand is it?
Thank you for the video! Did you experience any problems with some Notes playing louder than others on this keyboard compared to the Mainstage App?
Hi! I have not experienced that myself. But I’ve also not spent tons of time at the keys myself to maybe have those kinds of issues. But even from running audio at the board, haven’t felt that happen.
What gen of Ipad you are using with your arturia bro. Hope you will notice. Thank you
@@braveheartbraveheart78 sorry I missed your first comment. The iPad in this video was a basic iPad Air. Ran about $350. The Arturia is around the same cost for the 88 key model. Beyond those 2 items you need a usb-c hub that has 2 standard usb ports and a usb-c power port, and also for audio out I used a presonus audio box for an audio interface which is $100. But you could also use the headphone out on the iPad or usb-c hub with a headphone to dual xlr cable. That works too but the audio interface will give you a clearer sound. There are some links to the keys and audio box in the description. The Sunday sounds website says it will run on as old as a base 6th gen iPad that can run iPad os 14. They recommend an M1 iPad and newer for best results.
@@JonathanHeadley woooow thanks a lot for this bunch of information bro. GOD BLESS you for sharing.
Thanks for this video. BTW do you have any idea if I can assign na pads on my arturia for the snapshots on the sunday sounds app?
Yes you can assign the pads and all the buttons within the Sunday Sounds app. With the keyboard connected to the app, click the 3 lines in the top right corner of the app. Then click "midi learn". You will then be able to tap each parameter you want to assign and then push the button or move the fader on the keyboard that you want to assign it to and it will connect. I am about to release a video on this exact thing soon. Side note, on the Arturia, the drum pads are mapped via the keyboard software to play a note. To get rid of that, you have to clear it by using the arturia midi control software. I just did it myself. A little more convoluted to explain in a comment here though.
@@JonathanHeadley Thanks man! But I think that part on clearing it on the arturia control center is what I need to do.
@@lekeje So I will do my best to type it out. If you don't already have it, here is the link to download the midi control center from Arturia. dl.arturia.net/products/mccu/soft/MIDI_Control_Center__1_16_2_79.pkg
Once you have it open and your keyboard connected to the software, click on the drum pad you are wanting to program. Information for that pad will show up at the bottom. There is a drop down menu called mode that probably has "MIDI Note" selected. Click that and select "Off". That will turn off any existing midi commands programmed to that button. You then need to click "Save As" and save a user template. Whatever name you want. Last, in the "Device Memories" section, selected one of the memories and click the button "store to". That will load what you have done to the keyboard. You can then close the control center and then go back to Sunday Sounds and program that button to what you want and you won't here a note play when you push the button.
Hope that makes some semblance of sense in text form. Literally making the video on all that this afternoon, but hopefully my text will get it done for you. Thanks!
@@JonathanHeadley Tried a different method. Instead of setting it to “off” I put it on “switch control” then “unassigned” and it worked perfectly fine now. Thanks a lot for your help!
With this generation of IPAd without the M1 chip, does it work seamlessly without latency or crashes?