Muse Research Receptor V2.0.1 Software Update Manual User Manual

Page 9

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What's great about PLAY mode is that it makes it really easy to utlilize all the functionality of your

RECEPTOR without having to spend a bunch of time creating sounds. With SoundFinder in the PLAY

mode, even someone completely unfamiliar with software instruments and effects can use RECEPTOR.

As you become more comfortable with your RECEPTOR, you'll find it valuable to know how the different

sounds and effects are organized so you can quickly find the preset you are looking for.

You already know RECEPTOR does two basic things: it generates sounds using a MIDI keyboard or

controller, or it processes sounds coming from an audio input of some sort. Because of this, there are

two main categories of TAGs: SOUNDS and EFFECTS.

The Tags for SOUNDS simply state the type of sounds to expect in that particular Tag. For example, the

"Acoustic Pianos" Tag has all the various acoustic piano sounds, the "Strings" Tag has all sampled string

instruments inside it.

Here are some example Tags for the synth and sampled sounds:

TAG Name

TAG contains:

Expected Input:

TAG: Acoustic Guitars

Synth / Sampled Sounds

MIDI keyboard, controller or interface

TAG: Acoustic Pianos

Synth / Sampled Sounds

MIDI keyboard, controller or interface

TAG: Brass

Synth / Sampled Sounds

MIDI keyboard, controller or interface

TAG: Electric Basses

Synth / Sampled Sounds

MIDI keyboard, controller or interface

TAG: Electric Guitars

Synth / Sampled Sounds

MIDI keyboard, controller or interface

TAG: Electric Pianos

Synth / Sampled Sounds

MIDI keyboard, controller or interface

- etcetera -

The Tags for EFFECTS all have the letters FX before the effect category. Therefore, to hear a preset with

FX in the TAG name, you have to have a source of audio connected to the appropriate audio input.

In the realm of FX presets, different presets are designed for different sources of audio. You wouldn't

normally want to sing through a distorted guitar amp model, nor would you want to play guitar through

a vocal harmonizer. For this reason, presets are designed specifically for use with different pre-assigned

inputs However, there are also "generic" effect categories for specific types of effects that let you indulge

your more experimental side, or simply get you to a specific effect regardless of the input source quickly.

Here are some example Tags for effects organized by the expected input source:

TAG Name

TAG contains:

Expected Input:

TAG: FX Acous Guitar

Effects for Acous Gtrs

Input 1 on AudioBox

TAG: FX Elec Guitar

Effects for Acous Gtrs

Input 1 on AudioBox

TAG: FX Vocals

Effects for Vocalists

Input 2 on AudioBox

TAG: FX PA Effects

Effects for use with Mixers Inputs A/B on rear / Inputs 3 & 4 on AudioBox

TAG: FX Kbd + Gtr

Synths + effects at once

MIDI and Input 1 on AudioBox

Here are some example Tags for effects organized by effect type:

TAG Name

TAG contains:

Expected Input:

TAG: FX Reverb

Reverb effects only

Any Audio Input (varies by preset)

TAG: FX Spectral

Chorus, flanger, etc. effects Any Audio Input (varies by preset)

TAG: FX Dynamics

Compression, limiter, gates Any Audio Input (varies by preset)

Inside the effects-specific Tags you'll find presets organized by input type, i.e. inside the TAG: FX Reverb,

you might have GTR Large Hall, VOC Large Hall, and AUX Large Hall, where the GTR preset processes a

guitar on Input A, the VOC preset processes a microphone on Input B, and an AUX preset processes line

level inputs from an external device (keyboard, mixer, etc.) on inputs C & D.

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