This is a user-mode "driver" for the Harmonix Rock Band 3 wireless MIDI keyboard ("keytar") in wireless mode.
Only works with Wii version (as far as I know)
Please see the bottom of this document for licensing and disclaimers.
The keytar is a 2-octave (25-key) keyboard with full-size spring-loaded velocity-sensitive keys, octave shift and program change buttons, a footswitch/modulation pedal jack, and a dual-function modulation/pitch-bend touch panel. It comes with a USB dongle that communicates wirelessly with the keytar. It also has a standard MIDI out (DIN) jack.
Using this driver (although I make no representation that it will work for you), you can use the keytar to send MIDI messages wirelessly to your computer using the dongle that comes with the device.
The dongle does not support standard USB-MIDI, so this driver converts the dongle's USB packets into MIDI and sends the messages to a MIDI output interface of your choosing.
To use the driver's output as input to another program, you need some way of patching the MIDI "Out" of this program to the MIDI "In" of the other program. On MacOS, use Audio-Midi setup to do this (see Setup section)
No, it's just a normal program. The simplest way to use it is just to expand the zip file to a folder, then double-click "rb3_driver" in the folder. You will be presented with a numbered list of MIDI output devices. Just type the number of your chosen output device, and press the Enter key on your keyboard. If something goes wrong, the program will display an error message, then exit automatically after a few seconds. To close the program at any time, just close the window. While in use, you can minimise the program in the normal way if you want to avoid cluttering up your screen.
It should automatically detect the correct USB (input) device, provided that the keytar dongle is plugged in.
The good news is that you (Hopefully) don't have to compile it yourself. A ready-compiled version of the program should work if you download as zip (tested on Sonoma)
So far, I have only compiled it under MacOS's default make in Terminal.
The main dependencies are libusb (http://libusb.org/) and PortMidi (http://portmedia.sourceforge.net/portmidi/).
Once you have those in place (and your C compiler/build system obviously!), just type "make". (I think this may require GNU make - if it doesn't work, it should be simple enough to adapt the Makefile.)
At the moment, the keys themselves (including velocity), octave & program change buttons, the modulation/pitch-bend touch panel, drum split, all foot pedal features (including stomp and mode change), and the sequencer control buttons, are fully implemented. (Let me know if you find any bugs or missing features.)
Note that drum split requires a General MIDI-compliant synthesizer program. If your synthesizer program is not General MIDI compliant, it may output either nothing at all, or a confusing array of jumbled up notes, when drum split is active and the drum keys (i.e. the lower 12) are pressed.
Also note that the velocity-sensitivity is limited to at most 5 simultaneous keys - if 5 keys are held down and you strike another, it will register as having a velocity of exactly 64 (50% of the maximum value), regardless of the actual velocity. This is an unavoidable limitation of the keytar's USB packet format.
LED output is so far not implemented.
Using Audio-MIDI setup, enable the default driver, click plus to add a dummy device. Then, launch the driver. An output should show up (if Logic is open, select the Logic output).
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