Forum Replies Created


  • Brian2016
    Participant
    • Posts: 10

    The sample start and loop start at different places can be confusing and may cause this behavior.

    Also you may try zooming in to the beginning to find any silence that may get exaggerated.

    It may be just a really low pitched sample that has to “get going” first, in that case the higher pitches will have less delay.

    Sorry I don’t have any definitive answers.


    Brian2016
    Participant
    • Posts: 10

    This is just as geeky as it gets. I forget if I made the wavetable in Audioterm or just a drawing program, but it is a black and white alternating stripe. Any guesses as to what this type of glitch synthesis this is doing?

    Anyway its a fun little exploration. The angle of the envelope determines the pitch.

    • This reply was modified 6 years, 2 months ago by Brian2016.

    Brian2016
    Participant
    • Posts: 10

    <This Wavetable


    Brian2016
    Participant
    • Posts: 10

    I may have asked the question too soon as I have discovered
    that software envelopes are going to behave differently, and thats ok.

    The example in the video, sounds to me like a continuous volume ramping/fading whereas in the Falcon’s Analog envelope there seems to have a subtle but defined re-triggering.

    • So to get the envelope moving from the release phase to a new attack at the current level.
    • Mono yes , but not legato as legato never reaches the release phase.
    • Smoothly ramping volume on a mono program.

    EDIT> I’ve got it pretty damn close,but not a perfect re-creation.