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#4492 Polyend Tracker Harmonic, Pitch-Correlated Resonant Spaces

#4492 Polyend Tracker Harmonic, Pitch-Correlated Resonant Spaces #4492  Can the original Polyend Tracker create different frequencies of noise? Yes, the original Polyend Tracker can create and manipulate different frequencies of noise, but because it is a sampler-based tracker rather than a traditional subtractive or digital synthesizer, it accomplishes this through a few specific workflows. Here is exactly how you can generate and sculpt different frequencies of noise on the original hardware: 1. The Built-In Wavetable / Granular Noise Sources The Tracker includes basic built-in shapes when creating an empty wavetable or granular instrument. You can generate a basic white noise sample directly in the Sample Editor . Once you have that raw noise sample, you can shift its base pitch up or down across the grid. Pitch-shifting a noise sample changes its playback speed, effectively changing the "frequency color" (pitching it down creates lower-frequency, grittier, pink/brown-sty...

#4491 Polyend Tracker Synth Capabilities; +Resonance and Noise

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#4491 Polyend Tracker Synth Capabilities; +Resonance and Noise #4491  What synth capabilities does the Polyend Tracker have? When evaluating the synthesizer capabilities of the Polyend Tracker ecosystem, it is helpful to divide them into two distinct eras: the sample-based synthesis found in the original OG hardware, and the dedicated internal virtual analog/digital synth engines introduced in the newer Tracker+ and Tracker Mini (via firmware updates). 1. Dedicated Synth Engines (Tracker+ & Tracker Mini) The modern generation of Polyend Trackers moves beyond pure sampling by hosting a dedicated internal synthesizer architecture. It allows you to run up to 3 virtual synth engines concurrently per project with a maximum allocation of 8 polyphonic voices across the engines. The onboard engines include: ACD™ (Acid): A recreation of iconic, single-oscillator monophonic analog synths. It is tailored for snappy, squelchy basslines, aggressive slides, and classic Roland-styl...

#4490 Python Synth Methods

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 #4490 Python Synth Methods #4490  Python synth: If I have methods for VCO, VCF, VCA, LFO, envelope generator (EG), and noise generator, how would i apply them in code? To build a classic subtractive synthesizer in code, you need to connect these methods in a specific data flow, usually referred to as a signal chain . Think of it like a plumbing system: audio signals flow from the generators (VCO, Noise), through the modifiers (VCF, VCA), and finally out to your speakers. The modulation sources (LFO, EG) act like automated hands turning the knobs of those modifiers. Here is how you would structure the signal flow in a typical processing loop (usually per audio buffer or per sample). The Standard Subtractive Signal Chain [ LFO ] --------+ (Modulation) v [ VCO ] ---> [ VCF ] ---> [ VCA ] ---> Output ^ ^ [ EG ] --------+------------+ (Modulation) Implementing the Flow in Code Assuming your methods return a NumPy array or a sin...