The different ways to modulate a parameter – ALESIS ANDROMEDA A6 User Manual

Page 196

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Chapter 9: The A6 Modulation Matrix

194

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NDROMEDA

A6 R

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ANUAL

The different ways to modulate a parameter

There are four “levels” of operation that are used to control mod paths in the A6’s

Mod Matrix system:

Hardware Mods: The first level uses dedicated front panel controls to control the

level of a particular modulation source and is the most visible of the three. First level
mods such as PWM and OSC2 FM are commonly used and are easily accessed from
the front panel. Other “hardwired” mods include:

ENV 1 AMOUNT

which can modulate the frequency of either or both oscillators,

PITCH WHEEL

, also sending to the frequency of either or both oscillators, and

ENV 2 AMOUNT

which can modulate the frequency of either or both filters.

While hardware modulators can be turned off or changed at any time, you don’t
have to use a custom mod path for these functions.

Custom Mods (Mod Matrix): Second-level mod paths are the custom paths found in

the display only after a

MOD

button is pressed and are not related to a particular

source. Instead they can draw on up to 79 Mod Sources which are listed in Appendix
B. These “hidden” mod paths involve a large number of sources and destinations

that are not that common but are quite useful nonetheless. Examples include using
the parameters of a mod source as a mod destination. You can modulate an envelope

– typically a mod source – by selecting many of its parameters as destinations:

LEVEL

,

DELAY

time,

ATTACK

time,

DECAY 1

time, and so on. Another example would

be

EFFECTS

parameters: Distortion

SEND

or reverb

SEND

.

Fixed software Mods: Third-level mod paths are also found in the display only.
These mods involve triggers that are generated by a wide variety of sources

including the keyboard, sequencer, arpeggiator and MIDI triggers. Certain other
mod sources, such as

CV IN

in the Filter displays, go from a fixed source to a fixed

destination, and have no top-panel control.

Control of Custom Mods: “Control Routes” (CROUTES) In addition, control of

certain modulation paths can be established in the background using the

CROUTES

(control routes) screen, which essentially “reaches in” to the mod path to modulate
its level from a controller or another modulation source. For example, you can
control the amount of

MOD 1

modulating Oscillator 2 from the Mod Wheel and/or the

Ribbon simultaneously. But if the Ribbon was in the mod route and the Wheel was in
the control route, the Wheel would control how much the Ribbon controlled the

modulation of VCO 2.

About the custom MOD paths
A quick look at the A6’s front panel reveals 45

MOD

buttons strategically placed

around the modules. The important concept to understand here is that the function
that each

MOD

button is linked to is a destination. So when you press a

MOD

button,

the function or module where the button is located will be the destination (“what’s
being modulated”).

Pressing a

MOD

button causes the screen to display the current mod path along with

its current values, as shown on the previous page. If a modulation has not been
assigned to this destination, the display will inform you of that (the

SOURCE

will say

OFFSET ONLY

). Either way, use the soft controls to edit the source and adjust the

modulation level.

The

MOD

buttons fall into two categories: those linked to a single parameter and those

linked to a particular module with several destination parameters to choose from.
The following tables will clarify this distinction:

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