Monophony: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Content added Content deleted
(Created page with "200px|thumb|left|Polyphony 200px|thumb|center|Paraphony 200px|thumb|right|Static Chord Many synthesise...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
Static Chords: A solution, though somewhat reduced in function, to achieve a degree of pseudo-polypohony for those with no polyphonic control source is to use multiple oscillators tuned to different root notes to provide a 'static chord' - for example, three oscillators tuned to the root, minor third and perfect fifth will produce a minor chord, but these pitch intervals will remain fixed regardless of cv input, the chord only being transposed as the pitch cv is altered. |
Static Chords: A solution, though somewhat reduced in function, to achieve a degree of pseudo-polypohony for those with no polyphonic control source is to use multiple oscillators tuned to different root notes to provide a 'static chord' - for example, three oscillators tuned to the root, minor third and perfect fifth will produce a minor chord, but these pitch intervals will remain fixed regardless of cv input, the chord only being transposed as the pitch cv is altered. |
||
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="1" width="40%" align="center" font-size="60%" |
|||
|+ '''Navigation''' |
|||
|- width="45%" align="center" |
|||
! style="background:#dcdcdc;" | Sub-section |
|||
| [[Technique|Technique]] |
|||
| [[Chords and Polyphony|Chords and Polyphony]] |
|||
|- width="20%" align="center" |
|||
! style="background:#dcdcdc;" | Related |
|||
| [[Chords and Polyphony|Paraphony]] |
|||
| [[Chords and Polyphony|Static Chord]] |
|||
|} |