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Deeper Edits
Previously posted at E-mu<>Ensoniq; Author unknown.

The situation... you have a loop that works in the Verse of your tune but you need something rhythmically different for the chorus and bridge.

Isolation

  1. Take the break and apply a Hi Pass filter. (Meaning Hi's will be passed and lows will be filtered.
  2. Tweak the cutoff until the low frequencies, namely the bass drum, is filtered out. Some of the kick may still be audible no matter what you do - this will depend on the the frequencies present in the track. Your mileage may vary.
  3. If you did the recycle thing above, you should have a kick and a snare from this loop. Sequence the Hi Passed Loop on one track and a new kick and snare pattern on another track. So you can keep the basic groove of the pattern but now you can change the kick pattern to something different for your chorus and bridge.
  4. Once you get it sounding good, resample the new loop and add it to your recycled kit.

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------------0xKhTmLbOuNdArY Content-Disposition: form-data; name="userfile"; filename="ee_downsample.htm" Content-Type: text/html ASRXCITE ~ Tips & Tricks: Downsampling on the X E<>E

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Downsampling on the X
Previously posted at E-mu<>Ensoniq; Author unknown.

Use this to save memory or as a lo-fi grunge effect in it's own right!

  1. Select the sound you want to downsample.
  2. Go to Edit->Pitch->SemitoneTuning and set it to a positive value (say +24st). The pad sound should now be nice and squeaky.
  3. Resample the squeaky sound
  4. Assign the new sample to a pad (the source pad if you like).
  5. Go back to Edit->Pitch->SemitoneTuning and set it to the exact negative of Step 2.
  6. The sound is now downsampled - it will sound nice and grungy, and take up less space! Repeat steps 1 to 5 for more grunge. Remember to Process->Truncate when you're done downsampling!

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------------0xKhTmLbOuNdArY Content-Disposition: form-data; name="userfile"; filename="ee_onboard_fx.htm" Content-Type: text/html ASRXCITE ~ Tips & Tricks: ASR-X Pro's Onboard Effects E<>E

ASR-X PRO Sampler

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ASR-X Pro's Onboard Effects
Previously posted at E-mu<>Ensoniq; Author unknown.

The X's effects are really amazing. You can take something that was boring and played out and turn it into fresh groove food. With the amount of FX algos and parameters the possibilities are mindboggling but here's a few simple ones to chew on.

Sync Delays

  1. The X's Delay effects can be synced to System Tempo. Here's a simple way to make a tripped out song intro or to add some spice to a bridge section in your tune.
  2. Go to Pad/Edit and set the pad you want to work with to INSERT.
  3. Go to the Effects/Select and choose Insert effect 23 DDL-EQ. Next go to Effects/Edit and choose Preset=Sync Delays. This preset is set up to sync to System clock.
  4. If you haven't already, adjust the System clock to the BPM of your sample. If you don't know what the BPM is, set it by using the tap tempo feature in the Sequencer/Edit button. This should give your loop some nice rhythmic slapbacks, for further variations, edit the delays times. Once you get it goin on, resample and add to your recycled kit.

Xtreme Filtering

  1. Go to Pad/Edit and set the pad you want to work with to INSERT.
  2. Go to the Effects/Select and choose Insert effect 30 Dist-VCF-DDL. Next go to Effects/Edit and choose Preset=Slow Envelope. Just applying this is cool. Listen to how it sweeps the filter. Go in and edit to get it working perfectly with your loop. Try moving the VCF Fc parameter in real time to get some speaker shaking sweeps. Warning: this can wreak havoc on your speakers and ears, be careful. Once you got it good resample and add to your recycled kit. In the above examples we used the X's synth Hi Pass filter. Here's a few more cool synth edits to try.

Envelopes

In Drum 'N' Bass and Techno you hear alot of "machine gun snares" you know brrrrrRRRBRRRRRRRRR... You could sequence this by step recording 32nd notes, but here's another way to do it:

  1. Sample a break that has a snare drum that you like.
  2. Now find a snare in the break and loop a very small section like 1 or 2% around that snare. You should have that BRRRRRRRRRRRRR...happening already. But you want it to go brrrrrRRRBRRRRRRRRR...
  3. Go to Pad/Edit/ENV3/Attack and raise it a little. Ahh.. Adjust to your liking. If you want it even more machine sounding raise the pitch a few semitones.

Glide Time

Although this is not a parameter you traditionally use for Loops it's a very cool effect. Try this.

  1. Go to Pad/Edit/set Glide Mode=On and Glide Time to something other then 0.
  2. Hit a pad above or below the pad you edited.
  3. Now hit the pad you edited. You will notice that pitch will "glide".

"Where" it glides from is determined by what you hit before. So to get a very extreme glide try hitting a pad an octave or more higher or lower first, it will glide from there to where you're at. Not something you can use all the time but fun.

Pitch Modulation

Here's a cool thing to make your loop sound "wobbly", kind of like a Leslie Speaker on ACID.

  1. Go to Pad/Edit/Ptch and set...
    • PTCH ModSrc=LFO
    • Pitch ModAmt=+127
    • Pitch ModRange=64st
  2. Go to Pad/Edit/Mod and set...
    • LFO Rate=99
    • LFO Depth=4

That's a really Xtreme setting, try lesser settings for a milder effect. If you've done all the above you should have a nice Recycled Kit by now. With this much variation that 4 minute song should be cake. Make a system of putting the same elements in the same place. (Original Loop, quarter loop, Kicks, snares, Panned Left and Right, hi passed, reverb, reversed....etc) That way you can interchange kits with sequences that use the same BPM.

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Date Last Modified: 10/17/03

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Realtime Control
Previously posted at E-mu<>Ensoniq; Author unknown.

Fact: you love filter sweeps and all the things analog stuff usually does.

Also: you have a bunch of CDs with lot of beeps & blips of ancient machines but they're static Polaroid's of the real world and you want more real-time control. The ASR-X has many mighty filters with squeaky resonance waiting to be modulated by the matrix options, or even by your hands tweaking a knob. And, as we know, the oscillators of the machines you adore generate only a few simple (and periodic) waves that repeat ad infinitum.

So:

  1. Take a PC or Mac graphic wave editor.
  2. Sample, draw, or generate some seconds of the wave shape you like without any timbral, volume or pitch modulations.
  3. With the help of a zoom tool cut the wave at the level of a single cycle taking care of that both start and end points cross the zero line.
  4. Export it to the X. A DOS disk is OK. You don't need to use SCSI since the wave is VERY short and it loads very quickly from disk.
  5. Once in the X create a RAM kit, go to the "CUSTOM" category and select the sound, in the Pad Edit section and select "Loop Forward" from the wave Menu. Then you have your DCO ready to be shaped by the filter and amp.

You can get a lot of analog-style patches from this single wave that responds just like you want (without the frozen quality of the sampled ones), and they takes a very little memory of your RAM.

If you have access to external synth editor software, you can layer some of those patches and create some really PHAT basses, pads, etc.

Yeah, you can do it with nearly any sampler with filters, but the X makes it especially fast thanks to the DOS capabilities and the popularity of computers and graphic editors.

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Date Last Modified: 10/17/03

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------------0xKhTmLbOuNdArY Content-Disposition: form-data; name="userfile"; filename="ee_recycle.htm" Content-Type: text/html ASRXCITE ~ Tips & Tricks: A SMDI Transfer Tip (PC) E<>E

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Recycling on the ASR-X Pro
Previously posted at E-mu<>Ensoniq; Author unknown.

The situation... you have 15+ Audio Sampling CD's which you bought for 99 bucks each but since they only give about 4 measures of the loop you can't seem to make a 4-5 minute song with it. If you can relate to this dilemna, here's some things you can do to help take the 4 bars to 4 minutes.

  1. Sample a break.
  2. Loop, truncate and normalize. When doing these processes you'll find that the X makes a new file, most times you don't want that old file. To delete, hit the pad, hold down the (Sound) button in the Pad Section and hit (No/Exit). Answer the question.
  3. Once looped and truncated it's 00 00 99 right? So just divide 100 by whatever you want to split it to. If it's 4 bars and you want a bar on every pad, do a Copy params only (Pad/Process) to four pads and set the Sample start/ends to 00 00 25, 26 00 50............. tweak to perfection.
  4. If you want to pull kicks and snares out. Do the same thing "Copy params only" to a bunch of pads, set playback to ONCE FORWARD instead of LOOP, find starts and ends to isolate the single instruments.
  5. Go to ENV3 and set all the pads to FINISH. This will make pad play through without having to hold it down.
  6. Make even more copies and edit them, some simple ones to try are:
    1. a) Panned versions
      b) filtered versions
      c) Effected and dry versions
      d) reversed versions
      e) detuned versions

There ya go, you should now have one kit with multiple variations of that one loop. Now that you've made the basic ingredients by "recycling" the break, next thing is to use the X's various synth, effect and editor features to take it to the next level.

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Date Last Modified: 10/17/03

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