Quick and Dirty Transwaves
- Take a microphone and sample
the word "hello"(its good for hearing the
results)
- Now press <edit wave>
and turn the loop on, loop forward for now(i forgot about
this one, its a basic thing)
- Now you should hear
"hellohellohello"
- Press <edit,
system-midi> and scroll to AUTO LOOP FINDING. Turn it
off.
- Press <edit,wave>
again,and scroll to "loopend". Turn it to
zero.now you should hear either nothing or a very high
tone(or the whole memory of your sampler,but that's
another story)
- Underline the fine position
(the one to the left) and move the loopend away from zero
slowly. The tone you hear should become deeper.turn it
away until its about the same pitch as your original
"hello" was. This is a single cycle loop.
- Now go to "mod/src"
as I told you,select "transwav" as mod. and
"wheel" as source.
- Go to the next page
("mod amt=+0") and turn the modulation amount
to maximum,+99.
- Now if you move the wheel,you
should hear your singlecycle (=VERY short) loop. Move
from h to e,to l,to o. This won't sound like the best
audiomorph you've ever heard, but it explains the basic
technique just fine. It depends on the source sample you
use what results you get. A simple
"bweeeaaaooouuuu" from a resonant filter is a
much better source for example. The realtime
timestretching can be done if you use the envelopes as
the modulation source.a slow envelope will move slowly
through the sample, a fast one will do it fast, all
without changing the pitch.But, remember, finding the
right loop, getting rid of all the clicks that might
occur is a HARD job and you'd be wasting your time if you
try it if you don't know the asr/>eps by
heart."loopstart+x" is a much quicker way to
get a really wild modulation out of ANY sample! And, once
more, if you're interested in all the details, buy the
Waveboy Transwave Library. You'll get a great manual and
many examples for what a transwave can be good for.
Contributed by Derek Von
Krogh
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