Mono Machines SFX-60 MKII Manual de usuario Pagina 5

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You can change the start point and length of a pattern from within songmode. What this
means is you can literally remix and rehash patterns from within songmode. This is also
possible with the MD. So, for example: Instead of your pattern starting on its first beat, it starts
on the third beat and comes in off-beat, you can use this to create stutters and that feeling
that the beat has just fallen in on itself before you right it a couple of bars later etc..
...or by changing the length of the pattern : create shorter/longer loops from your original
patterns. - useful for that housey build up where the loop reduces to 1 qtr beat (or any
variation between 2 - 32 - 1/16th notes) instead of being 4. Or you can use a combination of
the two concepts for total rehashing.
This is just a basic use of these functions, when you combine them with switching between
patterns all kinds of stuff is possible.
To achieve 1 step of the mnm’s songe mode (shortest vaule is 2 steps), double the tempo of
for the two steps using the tempo fix; its crude but it works.
One thing that helped me a lot is "Function+Down Arrow" it's a copy of the
high-lighted "part" of the song, so if you're muting you always get your
"newest" muting part – recording mutes
EXTERNAL MIDI SEQUENCING
The MNM is able to sequence 6 midi tracks each offering a root note + 3 additional notes thus
total 24 in theory. In practice this is not quite true: Midi memory limit is 400 midi notes (single
or root) and 192 chord notes.
Using this info, a single step for single midi track can have an astounding 193 note polyphony.
However, you can only enter 99 chord notes per step, so the actual polyphony is 100. Using
all six tracks you can trigger 5 more base notes so you can get 198 note polyphony.
Well, nobody is going to use all that on one step, so the polyphony is spread across the steps.
For example, you can have 4 note chords for every 64 step, and this would make total 64
base notes and 3*64=192 chord notes. You would have still 334 base notes for other midi
tracks and they would have to be monophonic because the chord notes are all used for the 4
note chords.
So, the amount of polyphony on Monomachine is a bit unclear by its definition, you seldom
max the midi memory out so I wouldn't worry about it.
Important thing to note is that notes are shared between all the tracks inside the pattern so
entering a lot of chords on few tracks eats the polyphony from others. And this limit affects
only the Note on-steps. You can still have all the triggerless steps you like for controlling CC
and PB.
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