On Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 2:39 PM, madrayken <dene.carter@gmail.com> wrote: > That sounds perfect. Out of interest, I presume I'd still need to do > this even with a vactrol Low Pass Gate? (i.e. vactrols would still > need a 'trigger' to achieve the same effect) I think you may be confusing two different ways to achieve a similar (yet different in critical ways) percussion sound. I'll describe both, and that should make clear the "trigger" usage for both. 1. spiked filter percussion: This is similar to what's used in many old drum machines. You set a filter (usually bandpass) on the edge of self-oscillation, then feed the audio input a trigger, this impulse pushes the filter into oscillation temporarily until it decays naturally back to silence. The end result is a transient click (from the trigger) combined with a sinusoidal signal that decays out to silence. If you tried to use a square gate in this case instead of the trigger, you'd get new "spikes" into oscillation at each transition of the waveform, with positive DC offset on every other percussive hit. Triggers are better ;0) 2. Lowpass gate percussion: This is usually done with a pair of oscillators in an FM configuration, the output of the carrier oscillator going into either a single lowpass gate in "both" mode or serial lowpass gates, first the lpf and then the vca. The trigger signal is used here as the cv into the lpgs. This quick transient allows the naturally-slow and interestingly-shaped characteristics of the vactrol response to shine, and results in that classic lpg bonking sound. -Brandon
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Re: [Doepfer_a100] Re: Suggestions on how to create a trigger signal from an A-190 gate?
2009-01-11 by Brandon Daniel
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