User Manual

Table Of Contents
Included Instruments
Studio Stringsī™
356
The modulation matrix offers you up to 16 freely assignable modulations, each with a source,
a modifier, and a destination with adjustable depth. The polarity of each source and each
modifier can be switched between unipolar and bipolar.
Creating Modulations
You create modulations by selecting a source, a modifier, and a destination from the pop-up
menus in the modulation matrix.
PROCEDURE
1. Click the modulation Source field and select the modulation source.
2. Optional: Click in the modulation Modifier field and select the parameter that you want
to use to modify the modulation.
This modifier is used to scale the output of the modulation source.
3. Optional: Specify whether you want the Source and Modifier parameters to be unipolar
or bipolar.
4. Set the modulation intensity with the Depth parameter.
5. Click in the modulation Destination field and select the parameter that you want to
modulate.
Modulation Matrix Parameters
Modulation Sources and Modulation Modifiers
The following options are available as modulation sources and as modulation modifiers.
LFO A/B
The LFOs A and B produce cyclic modulation signals.
Amp Envelope
The amplifier envelope. The shape of the envelope determines the modulation
signal.
Filter Envelope
The filter envelope. The shape of the envelope determines the modulation signal.
Env 3
A freely assignable envelope. It is suited for pan or pitch modulation, for example.
Key Follow
This produces an exponential modulation signal derived from the MIDI note
number. Exponential means this source works with destinations such as Pitch or
Cutoff.
Note-on Velocity
Note-on velocity can be used as modulation signal.
Note-on Vel Squared
The squared version of Note-on Velocity. The harder you press the key, the higher
the modulation values.