
Once Thermae sequences through its two
intervals, it always returns to the delay time set
by tap tempo. This is the base step.
The base step
is always on, and just like
INT 1
and
INT 2
its
duration is set by a note division switch.
If your intervals shift the pitch downwards, this
means that returning to the base step will shift
the pitch back up. In this way, all sequences will
have some mix of both up and down shifting.
It also means that having both of Thermae’s
intervals on will result in a 3-step sequence.
Thermae’s sequencer is pretty straightforward.
It progresses from one step to the next, changing
the delay time as it goes based on the settings
of the
INT 1
and
INT 2
knobs.
But there is one helpful thing to know about:
The invisible interval.
Example time.
Tap in a nice slow tempo, play a note, and listen
to what happens.
We used both of the intervals to shift downwards,
but there was some upwards pitch shifting
going on as well. This is because of that invisible
interval: not pitch shifted.
We’ll call this the “base step” going forward.
Sequencing - Steps
21
20
-1 Oct
-1 Oct
REGEN
INT 1
INT 2
BASE
+2 Oct
-1 Oct
-1 Oct
INT 1
INT 2
BASE
+2 Oct
-1 Oct
-1 Oct
INT 1
INT 2
(Because each of the intervals descend 1 octave, Thermae must
shift back up 2 octaves on the base step)
Содержание Thermae
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