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Doepfer

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Re: arpeggiator with a-155

Re: arpeggiator with a-155

2011-05-05 by zaum

Even though many arpeggiators sound monophonic, in the vintage days, true arpeggiation was, as far as I know, always achieved with a scanned polyphonic keyboard, such as the Jupiter 4, which I understand was the first to feature it. What comes out is sometimes monophonic but the input is polyphonic.
You would play a chord and the circuitry sends out a  pattern from all the notes that are on. 

 In modern times the best way to do that if you don't have the dedicated hardware is to send a MIDI output into some software that turns it back into MIDI or more usefully to your modular, either directly into CV or converted into CV.

That said, a lot of vintage recordings I used to think featured arpeggiators are actually sequencers being transposed with keyboard voltage. A good example is Vangelis' "Spiral"
From a performance standpoint it's not the same thing at all. You can arpeggiate a chord or chords and then play it live in different keys with a single key press. Sequencers like the Doepfer let you reverse and randomize, but you can't turn a major chord into say a diminished 7th chord without stopping and programming in that new chord (or using some elaborate quantitizing that still won't add extra notes to make a triad chord into say an 11th chord )

Nick

Re: arpeggiator with a-155

2011-05-07 by aletropdj

Hi nick.

thanks for the elucidation. when i was looking for a arpeggiator patch with a a-155 i dont was thinking in that obvious complexity.
i just trying to simulate a arpeggiator whit a programmable sequence of notes. 
But I learn a little more about that. Sorry too no that doepfer dont have a module like that. the arpegiator really fascination me.

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