How to Audition Reason Combinator Blends with Your Keyboard

Feb 16th in Arrangement, Reason by Eric Shafer

Finding a set of sounds that work well together can be difficult. In Reason, it can be a laborious effort to create a combination of instruments, record some MIDI on each and then play them back. In this tutorial, we’ll look at a trick you can use in Reason to allow you to hear playback from multiple Combinators in real-time from your MIDI controller.

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Author: Eric Shafer

Eric Shafer is a music producer and audio engineer from Chicago, Illinois. He has worked on both classical and popular music projects, and is currently composing music for today's top artists and future artists.

Reason won’t let users put Combinators inside of Combinators, most likely because this would present software stability issues. However, there are times that being able to do this, such as controlling two Combinators from the same MIDI controller, would be incredibly useful. Thankfully, there’s a way that we can achieve this.

We can change the MIDI Bus to route the keyboard input to multiple Combinators and allow them to play at the same time. It is important to know that you cannot save the setup with the Combinator patch because both involve external factors. However, you can save your project file. If you’re using the file included in the Play Pack, you will still have to configure your MIDI bus as seen in the first step below.

Step 1

The first thing that we need to do is configure our MIDI bus properly, so go to Edit > Preferences > Advanced Control.

Next, for each bus (A-D), select your MIDI controller, in my case, USB Axiom 61 ln1. This will make it so each Reason device on these bus inputs will be played by your keyboard. Close the window so we’re back at the main project.

Step 2

Now, let’s create three Combinators. Go to Create > Combinator, and do this three times.

Do you remember that really weird audio device at the very top of Reason? Well, we’re finally going to get to use it. Click the “Adv. MIDI Device” button to reveal the Reason controls for the various MIDI devices that you may have connected.

What we see now is a list of buses at the top, and below that, a list of channels for that bus.

Step 3

Now, for each bus, we’re going to assign it to a channel and a device. This will go as follows:

  • For Bus A, we’re using channel 1, and assigning it to Combinator 1.
  • For Bus B, we’re using channel 1, and assigning it to Combinator 2.
  • For Bus C, we’re using channel 1, and assigning it to Combinator 3.

So, using the “Bus Select” button, choose bus A. Then, next to where it says “Channel 1”, click the down arrow. Use the menu to select Combinator 1 > IN.

For bus B, select bus B via the “Bus Select” button, and use the menu to select Combinator 2 > IN. Lastly, for bus C, select bus C via the “Bus Select” button, and use the menu to select Combinator 3 > IN.

Step 4

Just to test, look at your three Combinators. Then hit a key on your MIDI controller. You should see the “NOTE ON” light turn on for all three Combinators, not just one.

Step 5

To test it out further, let’s choose a sound for each Combinator. If you’re following along on what I’m doing, choose the following:

  1. Combinator 1 - Pianos (Acoustic) > Distant Grand
  2. Combinator 2 - SynthPoly > Velo-City Trance Lead
  3. Combinator 3 - Rhythmic > Silicon Juice

Now, click record, and record a melody line. You’ll notice that the pattern is only recorded for one track. If you want it to record for all tracks, simply click the melody line, hold the control key, and move it up. This will copy it to the other track.

Reason won’t let you record more than one track at one time. However, this trick can save you significant time with mixing and matching Combinators, as you can hear them all in unison before you actually record anything. Additionally, you will hear them all playing while you record, you just have to copy the notes to the other tracks after you’re done.

Here’s my result from using this method:

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Combinator 1

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Combinator 2

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Combinator 3

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All Combinators

As you can hear, having multiple Combinators helps give more definition to the overall sound, and it allows very unique textures as you can put a rhythmic sound with a lead sound, giving it more movement. Ordinarily this would require creating a Combinator, putting all the devices into the Combinator, and then mixing it using a line mixer in the Combinator. Using this method, we just created several Combinators and mixed them using the main mixer in Reason.

You can control up to four Combinators (one for each bus) using this method, which should be more than enough for practical purposes.


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User Comments

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  1. PG

    Eric Shafer February 16th

    Don’t let the short length of the tutorial fool you, this is a really neat trick. Let me know if you have any questions.

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    Pillai Design February 17th

    Cool effect! Could really play around with this!

    ( Reply )
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    Everestmindz February 18th

    Thank you for this tutorial.

    ( Reply )
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    drtgghyaa February 27th

    klassniy dizain

    ( Reply )
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    Adam March 2nd

    Great article, cheers!

    ( Reply )
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    Scribbler March 5th

    I have been reading comments here and thought I would finally sign up so I could post a comment now and then.

    Karen:)

    ( Reply )
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    Ben Robinson March 6th

    Hey eric i do have one question. I am using a similar setup live and i was using several combinators like you are but i assigned different key ranges for each combinator so i would have like 3 effects at one on one keyboard. But do you know if there is a way to change the octave of each combinator so that i could have lets say two nnxt’s that use the same octave range but would be on the same keyboard. That might have sounded extrememly confusing. But i have several sounds that i would like to have on the keyboard at once. but they use the same octave range so i’m stumped on what to do?? is there a way to make like the nnxt higher pitched so that when i assign it to a lower octave range it would be right on the money??? thanks for the sweet tutorial!! it opened up a whole new world to me!!! :)

    ( Reply )
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    Eric Shafer March 7th

    Ben,

    You can most certainly do this. First, create a combinator. Inside that combinator, create a line mixer. Then, with the line mixer selected, create 2 NN-XTs.

    Next, click the “Show Programmer” button on the combinator. You should see a panel called “key mapping”. There will be 3 instruments listed, line mixer, NN-XT 1 and NN-XT 2. Click the name of one of them. At the bottom of the key mapper, there are a list of parameters. Two of them are of interest for this: Key Range Lo. Hi. Click on “Lo” and drag upwards, you should see the note value change (and the visual range on the key mapper shrink). Do this to get one of the ranges set, then click the second NN-XT and do the same. You now have 2 NN-XTs being controlled on the keyboard in different key ranges.

    You can use this to have a bass synth in the low range and a lead synth in the high range.

    Hope that helps! :D

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      Ben Robinson March 11th

      Thanks Eric That helps so much!!!

      ( Reply )
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        Eric Shafer March 11th

        Anytime! Let me know if you have any more questions and I’d be happy to answer them. :D

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    Luke April 16th

    I would like some general reason help please…
    I am using a 3 octave midi keyboard, and naturally it selects F1 – F4 as it’s default. Is there any way of changing this via the software? (My keyboard has no control surfaces, just the keys.)
    Thanks, Luke.

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      Eric Shafer April 17th

      Luke,

      Can you clarify what you mean by F1-F4?

      Cheers!

      ( Reply )
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    Fredrick Harper July 6th

    Okay…when I try to record sounds from my keyboard to reasons…the patterns show up but there is no sound on the play back…. whats the easiest way to actually record and playback the sounds…thanks!

    ( Reply )
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    zk October 7th

    someone answer Fredrick’s question cause i am having the same problem too :(

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      Eric Shafer October 13th

      Are you talking about direct audio input into Reason?

      ( Reply )
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