Specifications
28 
Display  Trigger mode 
Key Step 
Striking a key advances the sequencer 
one step. 
On/Off: Off, On — Turns the sequencer on and off. 
Seq 1, 2, 3, or 4 Destinations — Sets the destination for each of the four 
sequence tracks. For a complete list, see Modulation Destinations on page 41. 
Seq 1, 2, 3, or 4 Steps: C0…D5+ or 0…125, Reset, Rest — Sets each step value 
for each of the four sequence tracks. The values are displayed as both relative 
note values and as simple numerical values. Note values are displayed in quarter 
tones with a plus sign (+) indicating that the pitch is a quarter tone higher than 
the displayed note number. The two highest values are Reset and Rest. Reset 
causes the sequence to reset to the first step, enabling sequences of fewer than 
16 steps or even sequences in which the tracks are different lengths. Rest inserts 
a rest on the selected step. 
About the Sequencer 
For many musicians, the term sequencer has become synonymous with MIDI 
sequencer; that is, a computer-based application or dedicated hardware device 
for recording and playing back notes and performance gestures via MIDI. But 
sequencers were around long before MIDI. Tetra’s sequencer is much more like 
the original analog sequencers typically associated with modular synthesizer 
systems. The sequencer comprises four 16-step sequences that play in parallel. 
Each sequence can be routed to a chosen destination, and each step in a 
sequence can be set to a different value used to modulate that destination. Each 
of the four voices has its own sequencer. 
1234
1
2
3
4
56789
Steps
v = ste
p
 value
Dest. 1
Dest. 2
Dest. 3
Dest. 4
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
S
e
q
u
e
n
c
e
Strictly speaking, Tetra’s sequencer does not play notes, nor does it transmit 
MIDI data. If none of the sequence destinations are routed to oscillator 
frequency, the sequencer may not even affect the pitch. In Tetra terms, a 
sequence is just a series of events at timed intervals that changes the value of 
one of the synth’s parameters in discrete steps. Because the four sequences play 
in parallel, up to four parameters can be affected by each step, one per sequence. 










