![]() So now, to be able to add a cue at the beginning of a song the choir is singing, I simply have to add two cues to the first slide to turn on the choir microphones: A4 is the mute group for the speaking mics on the chancel. In this case, G#4 is the mute group for our choir. Push the button you’re interested in, and lo, MIDI Monitor helpfully shows you what note you’re interested in: Download it and run it, and it shows everything coming across the MIDI interface. So how do we know what notes emulate button presses? The documentation provides this handy method: See where this is going? Unfortunately, ProPresenter doesn’t have the ability to do anything other than MIDI notes in a slide at the moment, so we can’t get really crazy with starting recordings or anything else requiring non-note MIDI messages. Meanwhile, over in ProPresenter, since Version 6, we have the ability to add MIDI Note On/Off cues to a slide. Velocity values below 64 turn the mute off, and above turn it on. The specific note determines the channel or mute group being controlled, and a the velocity value determines if it’s being turned on (Muted) or off (Unmuted). ![]() In the Qu Series, mutes and mute groups are controlled by a sequence of a Note On/Off message. The MIDI Module for ProPresenter ($99 but can be used in watermarked demo mode at no cost).Allen & Heath’s Qu Mixer MIDI Protocol Reference.If you’re using MIDI over IP with a Mac, you’ll need a special driver for the Mac. The Qu series boards can also do MIDI over IP (in fact, the Qu-Pad remote control app for iPad uses MIDI over IP to work its magic). But because it’s also a MIDI device, this gives us some options with ProPresenter’s $99 MIDI module add-on. This is primarily to be able to use the console as a multitrack and DAW interface, but it also lets us play back audio from ProPresenter media cues without ever leaving the digital domain, and saving us a couple of inputs on the board (although there’s no shortage of those). The Qu-24 is connected to the Mac that runs ProPresenter via a USB cable, which shows up in the Mac as a 32 in/32 out audio device, as well as a MIDI device. We use ProPresenter for our graphics presentation, and an Allen & Heath QU-24 console for our audio. So its not always especially easy to fully staff our tech booth, and sometimes, one must fly solo, which adds to the workload, and sometimes stuff gets forgotten, like unmuting microphones for the choir or the person reading the scripture.įortunately, there is some tech than can help us in this regard.
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