Dear visitor, you are currently not logged in. Login or Register as a new user .

- 1
- 2

Morphing between Patches
I just got the idea that it could be nice and easy as well to integrate a morph fader, in order to morph between two or more sounds. What you think about this? With other words, two or more Patches are played multitimbral and you can blend from one Patch into the other) so you can create nice, very complex Pad sounds!!!
OK, it is possible to do this by using the volume fader of the patches, but it is not the same!
www.myspace.com/seelensolo
OK, it is possible to do this by using the volume fader of the patches, but it is not the same!
www.myspace.com/seelensolo
madstyle, that is a great idea! After reading your post I thought about how easy this is to do. Here's how...
1st, Create a cool patch, let's say a lead.
2nd, Create a different lead that you want it to morph into.
3rd, (This is the important part) On your first lead patch, in a free Mod Matrix Slot set your Modulation Wheel as the source and the Patch Volume as the Destination. Set the Patch Volume to +63 on your first part. Do all of this again for the second lead, but this time set the Patch Volume in the Mod Matrix slot to -63.
4th, Create a new Multi Mode setup where you load the first patch into channel one and the second patch into channel 2.
5th, Set both patches to MIDI Channel 1.
Now by moving the Modulation Wheel up and down you can cross fade, or morph, between the two patches.
If you want even more excitement, do this again with pads and such that will create a really cool live effect where you can change or morph between to complex sounds while you are live on stage!
And for even more of a "Morph", you could set more then just the Patch Volume, you could use cutoff or whatever!
1st, Create a cool patch, let's say a lead.
2nd, Create a different lead that you want it to morph into.
3rd, (This is the important part) On your first lead patch, in a free Mod Matrix Slot set your Modulation Wheel as the source and the Patch Volume as the Destination. Set the Patch Volume to +63 on your first part. Do all of this again for the second lead, but this time set the Patch Volume in the Mod Matrix slot to -63.
4th, Create a new Multi Mode setup where you load the first patch into channel one and the second patch into channel 2.
5th, Set both patches to MIDI Channel 1.
Now by moving the Modulation Wheel up and down you can cross fade, or morph, between the two patches.
If you want even more excitement, do this again with pads and such that will create a really cool live effect where you can change or morph between to complex sounds while you are live on stage!
And for even more of a "Morph", you could set more then just the Patch Volume, you could use cutoff or whatever!
/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|
Ionis
Ionis
RE: Morphing between Patches
Love this.I just got the idea that it could be nice and easy as well to integrate a morph fader, in order to morph between two or more sounds. What you think about this? With other words, two or more Patches are played multitimbral and you can blend from one Patch into the other) so you can create nice, very complex Pad sounds!!!
OK, it is possible to do this by using the volume fader of the patches, but it is not the same!
www.myspace.com/seelensolo
This is one of the very few things I've always dreamed of that Access haven't already given us
Morphing between patches would be definitely a great feature.
I think crossfading between two patches, (although a rather interesting technique as exposed before) is not the same as morphing, where many parameters will vary continuosly , producing intermediate unexpected combinations of parameters that can spawn completely different sounds. I mean, different from the two original patches.
I think crossfading between two patches, (although a rather interesting technique as exposed before) is not the same as morphing, where many parameters will vary continuosly , producing intermediate unexpected combinations of parameters that can spawn completely different sounds. I mean, different from the two original patches.
This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "TimeKode" (Mar 24th 2010, 2:43am)
To erbalist: You set the MIDI Channels in the Multi-Edit while you are in Mutli Mode.
To TimeKode: Your right, that is more like fading then morphing. So...use more of you Modulation Matrix Slots. I mean really fill them us with opposite parameters. This would create more of a morphing sound, I bet!
To TimeKode: Your right, that is more like fading then morphing. So...use more of you Modulation Matrix Slots. I mean really fill them us with opposite parameters. This would create more of a morphing sound, I bet!
/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|/|
Ionis
Ionis
See post #7 above. Use multi edit to set same MIDI channel for different patches. If you want, you can also assign different patches to separate regions on the keyboard, by setting the upper and lower range notes for each patch in multi-edit.can you put more than one sound on midi chan 1 though ?
how do you do it ?

- 1
- 2

Similar threads
-
Feature requests »-
Next OS (os 4?) feature requests
(Aug 17th 2009, 11:17pm)
-
Problems and trouble shooting help »-
Browser/Save problems
(Feb 5th 2010, 10:29pm)
-
Questions and answers about Virus synthesizers »-
TI2 Factory Patches vs. TI Factory Patches?
(Dec 10th 2009, 11:09pm)
-
Feature requests »-
Features
(Nov 15th 2009, 3:17pm)
-
Problems and trouble shooting help »-
[Solved] How does the TI2 store patches?
(Aug 24th 2009, 12:07am)