User Manual
Table Of Contents
- A Few Words of Thanks
- Chapter 1: Getting Started
- Rear Panel Connections
- Setting Up the Pro 3
- Using the Main Display
- Sound Banks
- Editing Programs
- Saving a Program
- Using Paraphonic Mode
- Exploring the Pro 3 in Greater Depth
- Chapter 2: Pro 3 Controls
- Oscillators
- Mixer
- Filters
- Amplifier Envelope
- Auxiliary Envelopes
- Low Frequency Oscillators
- Modulation
- Effects
- Arpeggiator
- Sequencer
- Normal, Gated, and Trigger Modes
- Programming the Sequencer
- Recording Phrases/Sequences A,B,C, or D.
- Sequencing Parameter Changes in Real-Time
- Copying a Sequence from One Track to Another
- Copying and Pasting an Entire Sequence
- Muting a Sequence Track
- Creating An Extended Sequence
- Paraphonic Sequencing
- Adding Rests, Ties, and Velocity
- Editing Duration
- Adding Ratcheting
- Editing Other Elements of a Sequence
- Setting or Changing the Destination of a Track
- Recording Additional Sequencer Tracks for Modulation
- Using Slew
- Turning off the Sequencer’s “Notes” Track
- Sequencer Parameters (Front Panel)
- Additional Sequencer Parameters (Display Menus)
- Cue Program
- Tuned Feedback
- Master Volume/Program Volume
- Transpose
- Hold
- Glide
- Pitch and Mod Wheels
- Touch slider
- Adding Aftertouch
- Distortion
- Play List
- Miscellaneous Parameters
- Global Settings
- Chapter 3: Programming the Pro 3
- Synthesis 101: Synth Bass
- Creating Synth Brass
- Creating a Hard-Sync Lead
- Chapter 4: Using the Pro 3 with External Devices
- Appendix A: Modulation Sources
- Appendix B: Modulation Destinations
- Appendix C: Troubleshooting and Support
- Appendix D: Calibrating the Pro 3
- Appendix E: Alternative Tunings
- Appendix F: MIDI Implementation
- Bookmark 1
- Bookmark 1
29
Pro 3 User’s Guide
Filters
TAB 3 - ADSR
A:25
Attack SustainDecay Release
D:36
R:44
S:52
ADSR Env AmtFilter MiscFilter
Attack: 0...127—Sets the attack time of the envelope. The higher the
setting, the slower the attack time and the longer it takes for the lter to
open from the level set with the lter cutoff knob to the level set by the
lter envelope amount. Percussive sounds typically have sharp (short)
attacks.
Decay: 0...127—Sets the decay time of the envelope. After a sound
reaches the lter frequency set at its attack stage, decay controls how
quickly the lter then transitions to the cutoff frequency set with the
sustain knob. The higher the setting, the longer the decay. Percussive
sounds, such as synth bass, typically have shorter decays (and a generous
amount of low-pass lter resonance).
Sustain: 0...127—Sets the lter cutoff frequency for the sustained
portion of the sound. The sound will stay at this lter frequency for as
long as a note is held on the keyboard.
Release: 0...127—Sets the release time of the envelope. This controls
how quickly the lter closes after a note is released.
The description of envelope behavior just given is true when the amount param-
eter is set to a positive value. But since this control is actually bipolar, it is possible to
set a negative amount of modulation. In this case, the envelopes are inverted and their
behavior changes. The best way to get a feel for the difference is to experiment with
both positive and negative settings of the amount parameter.
The cutoff frequency setting may limit the effect of the envelope on the lter. For
example, in low-pass lter mode , if cutoff is at its highest setting, a positive envelope
amount will have no effect on the lter since the lter is already completely open.