Some wind controllers contain a built in sound generator and can be connected directly to an amplifier or a set of headphones. For example, a performer who has pressed a long held note on the keyboard with a sustained sound, such as a string pad, could blow harder into the breath controller set to control volume to make this note crescendo, or gradually blow more and more gently, to make the volume die away. A breath controller can be used with a keyboard MIDI controller to add articulation and expression to notes sounded on the keyboard. Unlike wind controllers, they do not trigger notes and are intended for use in conjunction with a keyboard or synthesizer. Simpler breath controllers are also available. The control signals or MIDI messages generated by the wind controller are used to control internal or external devices such as analog synthesizers or MIDI-compatible synthesizers, synth modules, softsynths, sequencers, or even non-instruments such as lighting systems. The most common form of wind controller uses electronic sensors to convert fingering, breath pressure, bite pressure, finger pressure, and other gesture or action information into control signals that affect musical sounds. Models have been produced that play and finger like other acoustic instruments such as the recorder or the tin whistle.
Wind controllers are most commonly played and fingered like a woodwind instrument, usually the saxophone, with the next most common being brass fingering, particularly the trumpet. San Francisco musician Onyx Ashanti playing a wind controllerĪ wind controller, sometimes referred to as a wind synthesizer, is an electronic wind instrument and usually in the form of a MIDI controller associated with one or more music synthesizers.