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Table Of Contents
Chapter 19 ES1 191
All ADSR parameters will always remain active for the filter (ADSR via Vel). A stands for
attack time, R for release time, while Gate is the name of a control signal used in analog
synthesizers, which tells an envelope generator that a key is pressed. As long as an
analog synth key is pressed, the gate signal maintains a constant voltage. Used as a
modulation source in the voltage controlled amplifier (instead of the envelope itself), it
creates an organ type envelope without any attack, decay, or release.
Glide
The Glide parameter defines the amount of (portamento) time applied to each
triggered note. The Glide trigger behavior depends on the value set in Voices (see
Voices on page 194). A value of 0 disables the Glide function.
LFO Waveform
The LFO offers several waveforms: triangle, ascending and descending sawtooth,
square wave, sample & hold (random), and a lagged, smoothly changing random wave.
You can also assign a Side Chain signal (any audio track) as a modulation source (EXT).
Choose the Side Chain source track via the Side Chain menu at the top of the plug-in
window.
Rate
This defines the speed (frequency) of modulation. If you set values to the left of zero,
the LFO phase is locked to the tempo of the project—with phase lengths adjustable
between 1/96 bar and 32 bars. If you select values to the right of zero, it will run freely.
When set to zero, the LFO will output at a constant (and full) level, allowing you to use
the modulation wheel to modulate, say, the pulse width: moving the mod wheel
changes the pulse width in accordance with the Int via Whl setting, without
introducing LFO modulation.
Int via Whl
The upper arrow defines the intensity of the LFO modulation if the modulation wheel
(MIDI Controller 1) is set to its maximum value. The lower arrow defines the amount of
LFO modulation if the modulation wheel is set to zero. The distance between the
arrows (indicated by a green bar) indicates the range of your keyboard’s modulation
wheel. You can simultaneously adjust the modulation range and intensity by grabbing
the bar and moving both arrows at once. Note that as you do so, they retain their
relative distance from one another.