2009

Table Of Contents
By tweaking the Vector Kick setting you’ll be able to create any dance-floor kick drum
sound your heart desires. These are the parameters that allow for the most efficient and
significant variations:
Filter 2 slopes: 12 dB, 18 dB, 24 dB
Distortion: Intensity and Soft or Hard
Envelope 3’s Decay Time: (D)
Vector Envelope Time 1 > 2: preset to 9.0 ms
Vector Envelope Time 2 > 3: preset to 303 ms
Vector Time Scaling
Creating Percussive ES2 Synthesizer and Bass Sounds with Two Filter
Decay Phases
As with the Vector Kick setting, the Vector Perc Synth setting uses the Vector Envelope to
control the filter cutoff frequency, with two independently adjustable decay phases. This
would not be possible with a conventional ADSR envelope generator. Try creating further
percussive synthesizers and basses by varying these parameters:
Vector Envelope Time 1 > 2 (= Decay 1)
Vector Envelope Time 2 > 3 (= Decay 2)
Vector Time Scaling
Square icons in the Planar Pad for points 1, 2, and 3 (= Cutoff Frequency)
Waveforms (choosing other waveforms)
ES2 Tutorial: Using Templates to Create Sounds
Welcome to a brief programming tour of the ES2!
While working on the factory preset programming for the ES2, a number of testers, sound
programmers, and other people involved in the project indicated that it would be nice
to start their programming work from templates, rather than entirely from scratch. This
feedback resulted in a number of tutorial templates that were added to the Settings
menu of the ES2 window (open the Settings menu and choose Tutorial Settings to see
these templates).
Needless to say, creating templates that cover all sound genres is an impossible mission.
As you spend time familiarizing yourself with the ES2’s architecture, you’ll start to
understand why.
123Chapter 5 ES2