They are not all created equal and, in many cases, a stand-alone midi interface will have better response times than one built-in to an audio interface. Midi latency can only be changed by using better midi interfaces. Audio latency is the time that it takes for the DAW to trigger the sound you want from the midi signal that was received, and then actually hear it. Midi latency is the time it takes for the midi signal to go from your keyboard, though the midi interface and then be recognized by your DAW. It must be something to do with recording MIDI on the same track with Scaler on it.There are two forms of latency that could be affecting you, one you can't do much about, the second, you can, but it has a price. EDIT: Also, if I route the MIDI to another track altogether when recording, there’s no issue. If I move the recorded MIDI to another track, there’s no issue. So it’s the equivalent of me placing my hand on a piano, spreading my fingers over a chord, but in turn pressing each note once, so that you can hear the individual notes that make up the chord…but as I push the 2nd note from the left, you hear the ENTIRE chord, even though I only pushed one. What’s most confusing - when I record chords on a track with Sclare loaded on it into the DAW and then open up the Piano Roll View to observe what’s making the strange chorusing sound - I don’t find ‘doubles’ but instead, if I audition the notes of each chord one by one, the 2nd note from the bottom of EACH chord actually plays the whole chord, not just the single note. So if I play ‘single notes’ in Scaler and record them into the DAW, they are recorded in a strange ‘doubled’ fashion, where 2 MIDI notes are laid almost exactly on top of each other, with a hair’s width difference laterally - causing a chorusing effect. I’ve tried turning the Local option off as you suggested, but the issue is still occuring. I’m afraid I have no other software to test it on, only Cakewalk.
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