Simply connect your B-CONTROL to your computer via USB. Best of all, you’ll discover things you can do with MIDI you never thought of before! Simple Setup It’s like having the real knobs for every control on your computer screen. Tweak “front panel” settings by simply turning a knob. Assign a dedicated knob or button to your most frequently used functions and make edits, all without ever touching a mouse. Eight of these encoders have a special push-to-set function allowing you to select, adjust and control an endless array of functions.
Full MIDI In/Out/Thru capability and 32 endless rotary encoders, each with a 15-element LED indicator. Sure, the B-CONTROL BCR2000 has 32 supercool rotary encoders for ultra-easy control of your virtual mixers, organ-drawbars, synths and samplers, but it has so many more features that will make this little marvel your go-to USB/MIDI controller – for everything. Want to control your synth, mixer, effects or signal processor with real controls? It’s amazingly simple to set up the BCR2000 to help you perform myriad tasks, all of which were never intended to be done with a mouse! More Than Just a Pretty Set of Knobs With the BCR2000 you can move real high-resolution encoders to control all of your computerbased virtual gear in Cubase®, Cakewalk®, Logic® Audio, Ableton® – and many other popular DAWs (Digital Audio Workstations).
Controlling the Dual Arpeggio Player.The total-recall B-CONTROL BCR2000 USB/MIDI Controller combines the unlimited versatility of today’s audio software with the feel of real handson controls. The BCR2000 is mapped in such a way that all functions are accessible by using the back and forward Preset buttons. Some devices have a lot of functions that exceed the physical limit of the 32 rotaries and 16 buttons on the BCR2000.
Save the BCR2000.remotemap, when asked to overwite, please do so.Ħ.
Open the extracted file from the download and select all text and copy / paste it’s contents in the original BCR2000.remotemap file.ĥ. Select all text and delete the complete content.Ĥ. Open the file Macintosh HD\Library\Application Support\Propellerhead Software\Remote\Maps\BCR2000.remotemap with a text editor (TextEdit).ģ.
Make sure you can view the contents of Windows hidden folders in the folder options and open the file C:\ProgramData\Propellerhead Software\Remote\Maps\Behringer\BCR2000.remotemap with a text editor (Notepad) and turn ‘Word wrap’ off. Ordered by the name of the Rack Extension. It contains mappings for all Reason 9 native devices, including the External MIDI Instrument (EMI), Audiomatic, Pulsar, Softube’s Amp and Bass Amp and more than 140 Rack Extensions and Players. I have an Behringer BCR2000 and like to share a Remotemap made for the Behringer BCR2000 with firmware 1.10 in default mode. In a short period of time, hundreds of Rack Extensions are released and if you have purchased a lot of Rack Extensions it is almost an impossible task to alter an existing remotemap: A lot of work has to be done and it is time consuming. Once Reason is started, it will read the remotemap, et voila… A lot of work
You can change this remote file with a text editor, add lines of code for new or existing devices and save the file. When you set the focus of your hardware controller to the combinator in the sequencer lane or in the rack, you can control a lot of things, but not all of them.Ī real solution is to change the existing remotemap for your controller. The combinator built-in programmer can assign rotaries and buttons to different functions on several devices in the combinator. Reason supports a lot of external hardware devices, but with the rise of Rack Extensions in Reason 6.5, the support for existing controllers for these new devices was halted.Ī simple solution is to select devices and combine them. The technique is made by Propellerhead and is called Remote. It enables you to assign functions from a device in Reason to buttons and rotaries on external hardware controller like the Behringer BCR2000. A remotemap is an ASCII, tab delimited file containing lines of code.