Specifications
20 
Sequencer 
For many musicians, the term sequencer has become synonymous with MIDI 
sequencer; that is, a computer-based application or dedicated hardware device 
for recording and playing back notes and performance gestures via MIDI. But 
sequencers were around long before MIDI. Mopho x4’s sequencer is much more 
like the original analog sequencers typically associated with modular synthesizer 
systems. The sequencer comprises four 16-step sequences that play in parallel. 
Each sequence can be routed to a chosen destination, and each step in a 
sequence can be set to a different value used to modulate that destination. 
Strictly speaking, Mopho x4’s sequencer does not play notes, nor does it 
transmit MIDI data. If none of the sequence destinations are routed to oscillator 
frequency, the sequencer may not even affect the pitch. In Mopho x4 terms, a 
sequence is just a series of events at timed intervals that changes the value of 
one of the synth’s parameters in discrete steps. Because the four sequences play 
in parallel, up to four parameters can be affected by each step, one per sequence. 
For the most part, the sequence destinations are the same as the modulation 
destinations, which is appropriate: a sequence is just another modulation source. 
For each sequence step, the envelopes are gated on for half the step’s duration. 
The duration varies according to the BPM and C
LOCK DIVIDE settings (or the 
MIDI clock, if synced to an external source). The envelope settings of the 
current program ultimately determine how long each step plays, though, and 
longer (more legato) or shorter (more staccato) effects can be achieved by 
editing the envelope rates. 
Mopho x4’s sequencer is a gated sequencer. That means it requires a note to be 
gated on—that is played from the keyboard, the P
USH IT button, or via MIDI—
in order for the sequencer to run. There is no dedicated start or play button and it 










