User Manual
Arturia Microbrute User’s Manual   28 
Filter 
What is a filter?  
In general, a filter  follows the oscillator and signal modifiers (wave shapers), and alters 
the spectral  content of  the  incoming  sound.  This  can  involve either  removing  (filtering 
out) or emphasizing (resonating) particular overtones. Filters are very important circuits 
whose design contributes greatly to the synthesizer’s overall sound and character.  
Filter types on MicroBrute: Low-pass, Band-pass, and High-pass 
A filter can operate in  various ways or modes. In  the MicroBrute the filter can operate 
either as a low-pass filter, a band-pass filter, or a high-pass filter.  
In  low-pass mode, the spectral  contents below a given  cutoff  frequency  (set with  the 
CUTOFF  knob)  remain  unchanged,  while  harmonics  above  the  cutoff  frequency  are 
attenuated.  In  other  words,  it  is  called  low-pass  mode  because  it  passes  the  low 
frequencies below  the cutoff and  reduces the high frequencies above the cutoff. The 
correlation of attenuation to frequency determines the filter’s slope, which is measured 
in  -dB/octave. The  Low  Pass  filter on  MicroBrute  is called  a  12dB per  octave filter 
because every octave above the cutoff point is reduced by 12dB.  
Figure 23 
In band-pass mode, the cutoff frequency becomes a band’s center frequency. Sound 
within this band remains unchanged, while harmonics below or above the band’s range 
are attenuated. 
Figure 24 










