Intuitive doesn't even come closerevvy wrote: Wed Apr 22, 2020 9:22 am
Now I've got permission from an old hand to start with current presets I feel less guilty
Clicking around has revealed some of how to program the thing but it's not the most intuitive interface ever. Sounds gorgeous tho.
If it's any help - to learn the WS - isolate one wavesequence and silence all the others - if it's a patch using the joystick for mixing the waves, you can just flick the joystick hard left or right or up or down to do that. Then at least you can can concentrate on how a wavesequence is put together (putting a sequence on loop will help - if it isn't already).
TBH putting patches together is reasonably sensible - just a case of layering osc into parts and layering parts into patches. Off the top of my head, programming the joystick is reasonably sensible too - you just pick your start point by twiddling the joystick to where you want and you can either twiddle it to the next point or draw it in by numbers (use the joystick).
There are some neat little tricks you can do to get things like weird chorussing or mod FX buy creating 2 wavesequences identical - then slightly alter the steps in the second one to samples in the same group or very similar - even use the same sequence but make the step lengths ever so slightly longer in one than the other, and loop them at slightly different points.
Oh, and one other thing - use good FX on them. The WS FX are OK - some actually quite distinctive, but especially those little tinkly subtle long sequences used for ethereal pads - put them through a decent Lexicon reverb or similar and they just shine at a different level. I'd forgotten how so many of those old 80s/90s digital synths sounded so boxy and muddy with their own FX. Put WS choral pads through a decent chorus instead of Korg's own and you'll be surprised at how good those vocal patches really are (and strings - mix a wavesequence of strings morphing into voices - bliss!). 32 osc patches of slightly different sequences all morphing into strings and voices at different pitches and you have your own choir on one key.
