Beginners Tutorial would be superb.
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- KVRist
- 178 posts since 27 Dec, 2004 from Dublin, Ireland
Hey.
Im checking out Zebra 2 at the moment and Im very impressed so far.
I know there is a manual online, and I have had a look through it. It tells you all the capabilities of Zebra, thats kool.
Still, it would be very useful to have a tutorial or two for Zebra 2.
Even something as small as a two or three page tutorial for creating some basic patches, and flirting with some effects would be fantastic.
Regards,
wombat.
Im checking out Zebra 2 at the moment and Im very impressed so far.
I know there is a manual online, and I have had a look through it. It tells you all the capabilities of Zebra, thats kool.
Still, it would be very useful to have a tutorial or two for Zebra 2.
Even something as small as a two or three page tutorial for creating some basic patches, and flirting with some effects would be fantastic.
Regards,
wombat.
- u-he
- 30216 posts since 8 Aug, 2002 from Berlin
- KVRian
- 581 posts since 21 Feb, 2005 from Upper Left USA
Womoma, if you have any specifics you need help with, feel free to hit me up too. You know where to find me 
URS, is the manual going to be updated soon? Quite a few missing sections and xxx??? in it still.
URS, is the manual going to be updated soon? Quite a few missing sections and xxx??? in it still.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 178 posts since 27 Dec, 2004 from Dublin, Ireland
Urs, thanks for taking the time to reply. Yep Ive had a look at Zebralette. It did help somewhat. The patches in Zebra 2 are fantasic by the way, though Im sure you've already heard that a million times.
The "controversial" [cm magazine quote] online manual is good for explaining what different sections of Zebra 2 do, but it will baffle people who are new to synthesis.
To be honest, I still think a tutorial would be superb. Something like a 20 minute video tutorial would be pretty easy to do, and very helpful to beginners, aswell as seasoned synthesists who want a quick quide to general use of Z2.
Maybe even a page in the manual where a patch is created from scratch, or a library patch is reverse engineered.
Either way, Ive managed to get my head around much of Zebra 2. I stayed up all night last night, reverse engineering patches.
I'm starting to think of Zebra 2 as a less fiddley, more user friendly Absynth.
Looking forward to buying it and sharing some patches.
Tarekith! Cheers man. If I have any questions Ill hit you up.
Funny you and me make time to listen to all the mixes and mess around with Zebra, wonder whats taking the rest of the guys!
The "controversial" [cm magazine quote] online manual is good for explaining what different sections of Zebra 2 do, but it will baffle people who are new to synthesis.
To be honest, I still think a tutorial would be superb. Something like a 20 minute video tutorial would be pretty easy to do, and very helpful to beginners, aswell as seasoned synthesists who want a quick quide to general use of Z2.
Maybe even a page in the manual where a patch is created from scratch, or a library patch is reverse engineered.
Either way, Ive managed to get my head around much of Zebra 2. I stayed up all night last night, reverse engineering patches.
I'm starting to think of Zebra 2 as a less fiddley, more user friendly Absynth.
Tarekith! Cheers man. If I have any questions Ill hit you up.
Funny you and me make time to listen to all the mixes and mess around with Zebra, wonder whats taking the rest of the guys!
- KVRAF
- 4197 posts since 23 May, 2004 from Bad Vilbel, Germany
I'd be very interested in writing a Zebra tutorial at some point. I've written a couple in the past (Access Virus out of interest, Roland V-Synth for cash), and seeing as I'm a TOTAL Zebra2 fan now (can't get enough), such a project would be FUN! I'm still learning new tricks in Zebra2, so it might take several months before before I'd be confident enough to start.
- KVRian
- 581 posts since 21 Feb, 2005 from Upper Left USA
Great news Howard, your Access tutorial is very well done.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 178 posts since 27 Dec, 2004 from Dublin, Ireland
Thanks Howard. That would be superkool!
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stevechristian stevechristian https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=140503
- KVRist
- 68 posts since 16 Feb, 2007
I would love something like what Macprovideo did for Sculpture. I learned alot about getting the most out of sculpture from that video and would gladly pay $30 - $40 for a quality Zebra2 tutorial of the same quality.
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- KVRAF
- 4229 posts since 9 Apr, 2003 from Right here, in front of my computer...
Hey Steve, welcome!
Video tutes are a great way to learn this stuff. The amount of supplementary material for Z2 will increase over time (user patches, scripts, templates, skins etc).
But actually, for a complex synth, Zebra is quite accesible to learn. Start off by only adding an oscillator to the grid and playing with that, seeing what the various parameters do - consult the online manual for some extra help. Then play with the envelope. Then add a filter, try the different filter types. Modulate the filter with a second envelope. Then add some LFO modulation.
Once you've got this far, you've already got a good conceptual understanding on Zebra - adding and connecting modules, add modulation to parameters using envelopes and LFO's.
Then you can explore the extra stuff - MSEG's, FM and Comb oscillators, effects and so on. Because each of them are so modularised it's relatively easy to stick to one module type to understand how it works and how to apply it.
Plus of course, the extra asset included in the price is the great and friendly user-community and dev-support. So you should be able to get up to speed fairly quickly, provided you're familiar with the basic synthesis fundamentals etc.
Video tutes are a great way to learn this stuff. The amount of supplementary material for Z2 will increase over time (user patches, scripts, templates, skins etc).
But actually, for a complex synth, Zebra is quite accesible to learn. Start off by only adding an oscillator to the grid and playing with that, seeing what the various parameters do - consult the online manual for some extra help. Then play with the envelope. Then add a filter, try the different filter types. Modulate the filter with a second envelope. Then add some LFO modulation.
Once you've got this far, you've already got a good conceptual understanding on Zebra - adding and connecting modules, add modulation to parameters using envelopes and LFO's.
Then you can explore the extra stuff - MSEG's, FM and Comb oscillators, effects and so on. Because each of them are so modularised it's relatively easy to stick to one module type to understand how it works and how to apply it.
Plus of course, the extra asset included in the price is the great and friendly user-community and dev-support. So you should be able to get up to speed fairly quickly, provided you're familiar with the basic synthesis fundamentals etc.
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stevechristian stevechristian https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=140503
- KVRist
- 68 posts since 16 Feb, 2007
I understand exactly what you're saying beej. I think I just need to understand how Zebra2 works a little better. To me, it's such a different approach to synthesis that I feel overwhelmed with all the options and what I can do with it. I think that is the best advice. Start with a blank slate and build up from there....slowly. BTW, is there a .pdf or anything that can be downloaded? I think the online manual's great, but I'd love to be able to have a printout for work to pass the time 
- KVRAF
- 4197 posts since 23 May, 2004 from Bad Vilbel, Germany
Yep, SLOWLY is the way! I found Zebralette very useful as a tutorial. It kept me focussed on the basics. Another tip: If something doesn't sound quite right, try to avoid throwing virtual hardware at the problem - use as few modules as possiblestevechristian wrote:I think that is the best advice. Start with a blank slate and build up from there....slowly.
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- KVRAF
- 4229 posts since 9 Apr, 2003 from Right here, in front of my computer...
- KVRAF
- 26978 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
not only that, but Zebra cannot sound good until there are at least a dozen modules in there!!beej wrote:If you've got it.. flaunt it...Howard wrote:If something doesn't sound quite right, try to avoid throwing virtual hardware at the problem - use as few modules as possible
- KVRAF
- 4197 posts since 23 May, 2004 from Bad Vilbel, Germany
pdxindy wrote:...Zebra cannot sound good until there are at least a dozen modules in there!!
Zebra simply CAN'T sound good, because it doesn't have TAE. Or a D-Beam...

