User Guide
sound. Some types of lters (like the bass and treble controls on 
your sound system) have subtle, gentle effects on a sound’s timbre. 
Other types of lters have stronger and more dramatic effects, and 
are frequently used as vital elements in the music-making process. 
Strong lters include phasers, angers, and wah-type resonant 
lters.
 A graph showing what a lter does is called the lter’s frequency 
response. The horizontal axis is frequency. The vertical axis is the 
lter’s gain.  A gain of “1” (unity) means that, at that frequency, the 
output of the lter is just as strong as the input. A gain of less than 
unity means that the lter’s output is attenuated at that frequency, 
while a gain of greater than unity means that the output is actually 
greater than the input. 
 Figure 4 shows examples of the frequency response 
characteristics of two common types of lters: (a) a shelving 
lowpass lter, which passes frequencies without attenuation up to a 
so-called ‘cutoff frequency’, and attenuates the frequencies above 
cutoff; (b) a resonant lter, which emphasizes frequencies around 
the lter’s ‘center frequency’. 
 Both of these lter types are widely used in contemporary music 
performance. Each of them has its own distinct sound, a large part 
of which is directly related to the shape of its frequency response 
graph. A cut-off lter is used at the lowest effected frequency of 
the MF105B. The remaining seven lters are all resonant lters.
33.
Figure 4 - Frequency responses of typical lters.










