![]() ![]() In Video 5 you’ll go deep into wave forms and spectrums including: (Similar to a wave shaper or a filter, modulators can be dropped in any module slot of the patch window!) ![]() How a modulator uses a control signal on the modulation source in order to get a particular effect on the modulation over time.The best way to settle on the type of waveform to manipulate the input signal by choosing from a simple morph, or selecting from the library wave list.Here are just a few of the things you’ll discover in Video 4: It responds to the amplitude of any given audio source, and shapes it depending on the volume envelope of the oscillator and the tuning effects. A wave shaper uses a waveform to shape the audio signal. In the next two videos, you’ll tackle wave shapers, modulators and spectrums. Common mistakes to avoid when using the frequency control to choose changes in frequency by semitones, or when setting a specific value in Hertz or MIDI notes.How to combine up to three individual oscillators on each channel and then merge the signal from each into the master output.In video 3 you’ll create your own sounds from scratch with the Patching window. Fast ways to locate sounds by instrument type, source, timbre, articulation, and general information from the selection list.How to find and load a sound from the library via the browser sound attributes.Video 2 will give you a closer look at the browser and attributes window. How to fine-tune your sounds with brightness, resonance, distortion, effect, mod depth and mod time.(Whether you are using it for electronic music or performing live you’ll see there are no limits!) How to combine oscillators, modulation sources, filters and effects to produce awesome sounds.In the first video you’ll learn your way around the user interface. The beginning videos are designed to give you a solid grounding in Absynth. ![]()
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