Tip 39 going negative — with feg depth, Tip 39, Going negative — with feg depth – Yamaha AN200 User Manual

Page 51

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51

Chapter 10 EG Basics

39

Going negative — with FEG Depth

As we promised in the last Tip, here’s a sound-creating pointer that takes advantage of the negative values of
FEG Depth. Try these settings out — and hear what it’s like on the “minus” side of the sound.

1 First, get everything set up with the following settings:

EG [SELECT]........... to “ALL” (both FEG and AEG)
[ATTACK] ................ to around 2:00 (90 - 100)
[DECAY].................. to around 1:00 (80)
[SUSTAIN] .............. to around 3:00 - 4:00 (100 - 120)
[RELEASE].............. to around 1:00 - 2:00 (80 - 90)
[CUTOFF] ................ to around 2:00 (100)
[RESONANCE] ........ to around 2:00 (70)

2 Finally, set the [FEG DEPTH] knob to 7:00 (-128) — the maximum negative

value.

3 Now, play several single notes, slightly apart, and listen for the very slow

attack and the long sustain. Hear how the filter slowly sweeps and grows
with the sound?

A negative FEG Depth setting reverses the FEG operation — producing a filter sweep effect that dips down
instead of peaks. This means the sound gets softer and more muffled, until the end — when the filter
sweeps back up again.

Try these, too
• Experiment with higher Cutoff and Resonance settings than the ones shown above.
• Adjust the FM Depth, Sync Pitch, and Noise Level settings — to give the Filter some richer

harmonics to work with, and make the sound more interesting.

• For even greater degrees of weirdness, try some long Portamento settings, too (for example,

around 90 - 110).

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