DC-removal
Try using a high-pass filter to remove DC from modulation sources (but remember that the HP
filter inverts signals). For an alternative using a lag generator, see
Processor Tricks
below.
Filter FM
Remember that you can also patch audio signals into the cutoff modulation sockets, not only
envelopes and LFOs etc.. You can even use the very same signal you are feeding into the filter,
or e.g. the bandpass (BP) output of the same filter.
Notch filter
(tip by xh3rv)
Try this for a polyphonic phasing effect: Mix a dry signal with a BP-filtered, inverted version of
the same signal. Frequencies within the band are removed from the original, resulting in ‘notch
filtering’’. The filter can't really make use of Gain or Resonance, it isn’t quite as versatile as a
parametric EQ's notch, but it looks like a fairly tight 24db attenuation at the cutoff point.
Comment by
lectrixboogaloo
: Try an LP instead of the BP... instant alternative HP filter.
HP bass boost
A good old trick worth mentioning here: A highpass filter can be used to boost low frequencies.
Set
Cutoff
to minimum,
Key Follow
to maximum,
Resonance
to about 30, then adjust the Cutoff.
Negative cutoff?
For extra-punchy filter envelopes, take the cutoff ‘below zero’ first by conn5V to a cutoff
modulation input (remember that the main filters have up to 4 cutoff modulation inputs).
Stacking Tricks
Height
You can make huge one-finger chords by stacking a couple of voices after setting up simple
chords with 3 or 4 oscillators. Here’s an example that sounds great with
Stack
= 2 and
Voice 2
detuning = 7.00.
Set
Tune
(Semitone) as follows:
OSC 1 +0.00
root
OSC 2 +7.00
perfect 5th
OSC 3 +15.00
minor 3rd
OSC 4
+22.00
minor 7th
Width
As mono or legato patches are unlikely to make excessive demands on your CPU, it’s always
worth checking whether your mono/legato patch sounds better with stacked voices than without.
Tip: You can easily pan two voices apart by setting
Alternate
or
StackVoice
as the Pan source.
Depth
Clever use of the
Stack Voice
modulator is key to making the most of Bazille’s stacking feature.
Use it to pan voices apart, to multiply LFO rates, to shift cutoff or even the sequencer’s
Rotate
value (is the mind boggling already?)
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