arpeggiators
Jim Johnson
jamos at technotoys.com
Tue Mar 23 18:04:00 CET 1999
>To my understanding, an arpeggiator is pretty much just a loop/phrase
>sequence "keyed" to a specific note (the one that triggers the sequence)
>and played untill pressure or the "lock" is released. Am I close?
Not at all.
An arpeggiator scans the keyboard and outputs any notes that are held down,
one at a time, monophonically. A basic arpeggiator will have controls for
speed, direction, and perhaps a range extend switch.
<Shameless plug, but you asked for it> To see my definition of an advanced
arpeggiator, check out Arp-X8 (Windows) at my web site, below.
Jim Johnson
Metaphoric Software
-------------------
Makers of Techno Toys
Software for Electronic Music
http://www.technotoys.com
info at technotoys.com
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 3/22/99 at 2:33 PM Claire F. wrote:
>I was just reading a little bit on the new Waldorf Q synth (yummy?) and
>noticed yet another compnay brining up, but noe defining, their "advanced
>arpeggiator." I got to thinking on what exactly an advanced
>arpeggiator might be (I vote for extraneous lights that spell out the
>name of your favorite old analog in tempo to the arp), which begs the (on
>topic) question, "what is a basic arpeggiator?"
>To my understanding, an arpeggiator is pretty much just a loop/phrase
>sequence "keyed" to a specific note (the one that triggers the sequence)
>and played untill pressure or the "lock" is released. Am I close?
>What I was wondering is this: What do you guys think would be must have
>features on an "advanced" arpeggiator? Why?
>Just curious with a long day of work left ahead of me.
>
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>"The SCI Prophet 600... tear it out of that housing, rack 'er up and
> semi-modularize it, and you got yourself one heck of a machine..."
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