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3

Accent and Levels:

Dynamic Accent and Level control of any drum sound in the mix is a big part of

making a beat sound right. Dynamic Accent provides emphasis on a particular note

through loudness. In analog circuits like the CB808, the accent pulse physically

"hits" the internal VCA circuit harder and provides not only a louder sound but also

slightly more attack (much like if you were to hit a real drum harder or softer

with a drum stick.)

While the original 808 has one global accent knob affecting all of its sounds

simultaneously, the CB808 (and all other drum modules in this series) offers an

independent accent level control. This feature adds far more dynamics than what

was possible with the original machine.

Accent Explained:

The accent input is a gate/trigger signal.

While the accent input is not in use, the incoming gate input is routed

(normalized) to both the accent input and the gate input. This serves for two

purposes:

1. To allow you to reach the hottest drum sound possible even when there is no

accent input signal connected.

2. It makes the ACCENT knob act as a fine control of the output gain level. This

is very useful in situations where the level knob range is too coarse for setting

precise levels in a mix with other drum sounds.    

    

Connecting a gate signal into the accent input will break the internal routing

mentioned above and will allow for independent control over accent regardless

of the incoming gate signal. In this case as long as there is no accent signal

present, the drum sound will be set to the minimum accent level set internally,

and once the accent input gets hit by a gate signal, the drum sound will get

louder in proportion to the accent level set by the accent knob. In short: the

higher the knob setting, the larger the difference will be in gain levels between

the accented notes and the un-accented notes.

Dynamics and Gain.

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