Paraphony: Difference between revisions
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A solution somewhat further reduced in function is to use "Static Chords"; a way of achieving 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. |
A solution somewhat further reduced in function is to use "Static Chords"; a way of achieving 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. |
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{{From Muff Wiggler wiki|{{PAGENAME}}}} |
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|[[Technique]] |
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|[[Chords and polyphony]] |
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!Related |
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|[[Chords and polyphony|Paraphony]] |
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|[[Chords and polyphony|Static chord]] |
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