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Re: LFO Speed in BPM and some LFO tricks


Daniel Forró
 

Hi, Eb,

I think that the most practical table should have the value of instrument setting, value in Hz and maybe additionally value in BPM (which can be easily derived from Hz).?
The last one is not so important to me, I don't need synced modulations for my music. Besides different values can be used for the same tempo in dependance which rhythmic density we want to get - so 30, 60, 120 or 240 is same tempo, just different density. With some simple math it's easy to obtain triplets, quintuplets, sextuplets...

I suppose values will be different for different Yamaha synths, as almost each of them has different minimal value... It's also quite expectable that we'll get only some tempo values, not all values continuously.

I know something about VST plugins and use some but I always thought they are special Mac versions. When Nikola emphasizes?his plugin is for Windows I'm not sure if it can work on Mac.

I haven't Cubase nor Studio One, only MOTU Digital Performer V5 under OSX which I don't use. To be able to use old Korg cards Oasys PCI and 1212 I/O I still keep old PPC G4 machines and use OS9 for most of my music software (I like a lot the old sequencer Opcode Studio Vision Pro). I can boot only OSX 10.5.8, so I can't use lot of new programs.?

Daniel Forro


On 10 Dec, 2013, at 5:53 AM, Eb Mayat wrote:

I would guess that 120 bpm would be equivalent to 2 Hz.?

Wow, you have very interesting ideas using just a 4OP synth.

I only regret I'm on Mac so probably I can't try your excellent plugin.

Daniel, VSTs can be loaded in Cubase and perhaps also Presonus Studio One running on an Apple Mac.

Regards,?
Eb


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