Stacked Oscillators...
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- KVRian
- 620 posts since 18 Nov, 2004 from Orlando, Bitches!
Zebras manual is incomplete about this, but I was wondering if stacking oscillators on one channel creates an FM sound. If you have Ableton operators you know what I mean, stacking an osc upon another has ones freq modulating the lower ones. I tried it, sweeping the modulators frequency, didnt sound too fm-ish, but then I put the osc on its own channel and the sound was the same.In a nutshell, what I'm asking is does Zebras regular osc do FM to each other, or is the only FM is achieved only by using the FM oscs? Makes sense?
Why cry about your own desires, when I could have them and leave you standing in the sadness of your own....
- KVRAF
- 4141 posts since 11 Aug, 2006 from Texas
Howard Scarr has been commissioned by Urs to write a manual for Zebra2, it'll get there someday.johnnytluxury wrote:what I'm asking is does Zebras regular osc do FM to each other, or is the only FM is achieved only by using the FM oscs? Makes sense?
In the mean-time to answer your question, yes FM oscillators can interact with each other.
Take a look at Michael Kastrup's excellent Zebra2 FM School presets and comments to learn some of the basics.
Essentially you need to change the FM Osc type, it's the small yellow words below the FMO # on the module. The options that contain the word "self" do not modulate input. The rest of the options do apply FM to the incoming signal.
Also take a look into the Filter FM knob on the XMF filters. The Filter has two inputs if you look at it. Normally they both are attached to the same lane. If you right-click on the XMF module and select "Sidechain #" you can select a different lane for FM input. Then by setting the Filter FM knob you can apply a certain amount of FM-style sound to the XMF filter input on the main signal path.
It's not 1:1 the same as Ableton's Operator or FM8 but the sounds generated can be FM-like. Again, check out Michael Kastrup's (mkastrup) free presets for Zebra at the Zebra2 PatchLib.
I hope this helps. Cheers!
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 620 posts since 18 Nov, 2004 from Orlando, Bitches!
Thanks, but this is not what I'm asking. I know about the dedicated FM oscs, if you'll note in my query. I also know about the XMF, but I didnt ask about that. I'm only asking about the regular wave oscs and how they and only they interact with each other. If they are stacked on top of each other, do they modulate in the same way Abletons Operator does.bmrzycki wrote:
In the mean-time to answer your question, yes FM oscillators can interact with each other.
Why cry about your own desires, when I could have them and leave you standing in the sadness of your own....
- KVRAF
- 13133 posts since 7 May, 2006 from Southern California
No, the oscillators are just summed in that configuration.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 620 posts since 18 Nov, 2004 from Orlando, Bitches!
thanks Justin. Sucks though, as Operator allows different waves as modulators, and I can get some sick timbres, but with Zebra and only using FMOs, the timbres are quite sane. Urs, I'm hoping you read this, I think if you stack regular oscs you should get freq modulated waveforms, works for Operator, and works well!justin3am wrote:No, the oscillators are just summed in that configuration.
Why cry about your own desires, when I could have them and leave you standing in the sadness of your own....
- KVRAF
- 1617 posts since 11 Dec, 2008 from Minneapolis
Don't know if you've tried this, but the FMO will accept *anything* above it on the grid as a modulator*. This is very, very powerful. As an example, there's a patch 'HS DY7 Add Pad' in the factory bank's Pianoids category that shows a couple instances where OSC modules feed FMOs. Just an OSC->FMO has endless potential and putting literally anything->FMO is endless on top of that. In terms of modulators, in Zebra you can do just what Operator does and barely scratch the surface of what's possiblejohnnytluxury wrote:Sucks though, as Operator allows different waves as modulators, and I can get some sick timbres, but with Zebra and only using FMOs, the timbres are quite sane.
It might be interesting to note that in Howard's patch, the OSC modules are outputting something that's FMish in the sense that it's pretty simple in terms of harmonics - this is visible in the OSC tabs, they're sparse spectral/additive waveforms which don't cause a complete jungle of sidebands when carried by an FMO. With oscillator effects, any wavetable can turn into something harmonically sparse before it hits the FMO - a little different that what can be gotten from FMOs functioning as modulators, but clean enough that the FMO carrier doesn't begin to snarl. This is one of my favorite tricks in Zebra, not something just any synth can do, and productive.
* - Unless the FMO is set to one of the FM Self modes, where it functions more like an ordinary oscillator and just sums what it generates by itself with whatever it's input is. The other modes as well as the 'generator' fields in the FMO tab (pure sine, quadric sine, sine shift etc.) give the FMO module some flexibility as a carrier - it isn't quite the same as in Operator, but comparable.
- KVRAF
- 13133 posts since 7 May, 2006 from Southern California
Meh, it's never really bothered me. I don't really get along well with Operator.johnnytluxury wrote:Sucks though.justin3am wrote:No, the oscillators are just summed in that configuration.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 620 posts since 18 Nov, 2004 from Orlando, Bitches!
I guess I can say I never really fuxxor'd with fm much until Operator, and since then, its kinda my workflow now. Its really logical, fm wise, it makes sense. The osc above the modulates the one below, and so on. And since its a visual representation, it stays with you. I just assumed Zebra would be like that, being that you can stack oscs. So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output? But I'm definitely not knocking Zebra, it kicks Operators ass all day and night and is my fav synth period.justin3am wrote:
Meh, it's never really bothered me. I don't really get along well with Operator.
Why cry about your own desires, when I could have them and leave you standing in the sadness of your own....
- KVRAF
- 9590 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
Because everyone and their uncles and aunts wants supersaws which is a shitload of sawtooth waves slightly detuned from each other. I estimate the answer to 90 % of the questions in the sound design forum is a supersaw.johnnytluxury wrote:So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output?
- Banned
- 6129 posts since 9 Oct, 2007 from an inharmonious society
There are all the other modules besides oscillators that can be affected by stacking and routing though. Comb, FM, Ring modulators, etc...johnnytluxury wrote:So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output?
Maybe if you experiment staking osc-comb-fm-filter, add lots of modulation sources, you might be surprised by what you find.
After spending years using Zebra, I still manage to get that "wow" sound, feeling many times, just by trying different stacking and routing orders.
You should also try to spend sometime with just 1 osc, and try out different osc spectra FX settings, as they can really make great changes to the tone, very easily.
- KVRAF
- 26978 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
It is much more convenient than having to use a separate channel for each osc and then having to use mix modules to mix them into one to send to a filter...johnnytluxury wrote:So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output?
- KVRAF
- 4197 posts since 23 May, 2004 from Bad Vilbel, Germany
Doesn't sound like you quite "get" what Zebra's main grid is about, Johnny.johnnytluxury wrote:So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output?
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 620 posts since 18 Nov, 2004 from Orlando, Bitches!
I'd stand up and applause but you still wouldn't be here to see me cheer. Perfect answer. Why? Cause I'm spending my time trying to replicate presets i did with Albino, and its a bit of a different structure, being how routing oscs to the filter, and with Zebra and the seperate grid positions, I was using a lot of mixer modules to get that right blend of osc to filter ratio. I *never* thought of stacking the osc so that they can combine and go to x filter w/o mixer need and the complexities that brings... You, sir, are a genius! Well, I am too, but you said it first.pdxindy wrote:It is much more convenient than having to use a separate channel for each osc and then having to use mix modules to mix them into one to send to a filter...johnnytluxury wrote:So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output?
Why cry about your own desires, when I could have them and leave you standing in the sadness of your own....
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 620 posts since 18 Nov, 2004 from Orlando, Bitches!
Because I didn't understand its complete usage in one go? Well, hail to thee. My question was quite valid and in now way did I assume full knowledge of Zebra structure. pdxindy did me full justice. Get on with that manual.Howard wrote:Doesn't sound like you quite "get" what Zebra's main grid is about, Johnny.johnnytluxury wrote:So I guess I'd ask why even make it possible (stacking) when all it achieves is a summed (I assume louder) output?
All we need is answers, not criticisms.
Why cry about your own desires, when I could have them and leave you standing in the sadness of your own....
- KVRAF
- 4197 posts since 23 May, 2004 from Bad Vilbel, Germany
Yes, I MUST! Rotten cold stopped mejohnnytluxury wrote:Get on with that manual.
I didn't understand your problem, I wasn't criticizing.All we need is answers, not criticisms.
