well, the truth is, the vee-ones are so old-school that anything you may find on the inter-tubes about any other old synth, ever since from the (last century) 80's to date, may well apply... ;)
why don't just fire up the thing, connect to a MIDI keyboard controller and just try and play and work it out, just for the fun of it? and if you feel lucky, or overwhelmingly bored, you may try the odds with the "Random" button ? just for the laughs, at least?
I'm sure you'll get the handle of it, in a short time anyway.
I am interested in using the synth as a educative tool (for myself and not only for myself) for making old school sounds together with Fred Welsch's Sythesizer cookbook which provides patches in the format of attached image. I am afraid that not everything is self explanatory. I feel a bit confused with osc mapping and LFO freq for example.
General comments: It works! QMIDINet also works! I only wish I could share the audio with my Windows computer (FL Studio DAW) over wifi without connecting laptop to an audio console. j2n doesn't help for my local dram setup.
oh, that's interesting,... may I also ask what do you think these do? :)
cheers
EDIT: well, Detune is not really your regular "detune" control, may I tell you: in fact, it detunes *both* oscillators on the same amount but in diverging directions: if set to 0.0 means that no detuning is applied of course; however, if set to 100.0 then both oscilators are detuned in one octave (12 semitones) apart from each other, or a half-octave (6 semitones) from the center aka the nominal note/key tone of the whichever tuning scale you're set up to (nb. synthv1 can go microtonal, not just the western-standard equal-temperament- tuning, as is the boring default, mind you;)
re. Where can I find tutorials or docs?
hi, you're welcome
well, the truth is, the vee-ones are so old-school that anything you may find on the inter-tubes about any other old synth, ever since from the (last century) 80's to date, may well apply... ;)
why don't just fire up the thing, connect to a MIDI keyboard controller and just try and play and work it out, just for the fun of it? and if you feel lucky, or overwhelmingly bored, you may try the odds with the "Random" button ? just for the laughs, at least?
I'm sure you'll get the handle of it, in a short time anyway.
cheers
Good answer kkkkkkk. Fair
Good answer kkkkkkk. Fair enough.. I'll do that.
Thank you for your vee-ones and qtractor!
Well... a brief tutorial might help
I am interested in using the synth as a educative tool (for myself and not only for myself) for making old school sounds together with Fred Welsch's Sythesizer cookbook which provides patches in the format of attached image. I am afraid that not everything is self explanatory. I feel a bit confused with osc mapping and LFO freq for example.
General comments: It works! QMIDINet also works! I only wish I could share the audio with my Windows computer (FL Studio DAW) over wifi without connecting laptop to an audio console. j2n doesn't help for my local dram setup.
re. a brief tutorial might help...
hi, again, what's really the question here, may I ask?
:)
re. a brief tutorial might help...
I did not find a way to tune the oscillator pair an octave apart or detune the second one a little bit.
re. a brief tutorial might help...
oh, that's interesting,... may I also ask what do you think these do? :)
cheers
EDIT: well, Detune is not really your regular "detune" control, may I tell you: in fact, it detunes *both* oscillators on the same amount but in diverging directions: if set to 0.0 means that no detuning is applied of course; however, if set to 100.0 then both oscilators are detuned in one octave (12 semitones) apart from each other, or a half-octave (6 semitones) from the center aka the nominal note/key tone of the whichever tuning scale you're set up to (nb. synthv1 can go microtonal, not just the western-standard equal-temperament- tuning, as is the boring default, mind you;)
Thanks!
Thanks! I've posted another question to the qtractor section. I am looking for your feedback there too.
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