LFO (Low-Frequency Oscillator) is a low-frequency wave with different phases. There are different modes of operation for the LFO. Consequently, when you stop recording and then start again, the wave does not play from a different point. I suppose you can stop this by adjusting the LFO settings
@-Krek Cool thanks! So, if you find a groove/pattern you like, do you just record it to audio straight away? Seems like a bit of a double edge sword hitting stop and losing the current groove 😂
@@colmanbuckley6646 In an ideal world, your synth should be routed to a DAW, with multitrack recording in real-time. In this video, I was just recording for fun :)
Soo siiccc!! thanks a lot!
Когда выбирал ты инструменты в начале видео , было что-то интересное такое надо писать !!!!))
Это дефолтные звуки, они достаточно скучные :)
Class!
I take it its coz the lfo is just picking up not retriggered. If so, can you you stop this?
LFO (Low-Frequency Oscillator) is a low-frequency wave with different phases. There are different modes of operation for the LFO. Consequently, when you stop recording and then start again, the wave does not play from a different point. I suppose you can stop this by adjusting the LFO settings
Play*
@-Krek Cool thanks! So, if you find a groove/pattern you like, do you just record it to audio straight away? Seems like a bit of a double edge sword hitting stop and losing the current groove 😂
@@colmanbuckley6646 In an ideal world, your synth should be routed to a DAW, with multitrack recording in real-time. In this video, I was just recording for fun :)
Gotya. Thanks for the info! I just picked one up on thomann 😂
Question, why does the lead sound change everything you stop/start??
Probably the starting point of the lfo is set to behave like this
Когда выбирал ты инструменты в начале видео , было что-то интересное такое надо писать !!!!))