Or with Roughmath-I, we get a very clav sound. Additive mix V, if you turn the position knob all the way down, we get an electric bass tone. The first two obvious ones will be Guitar Pulse and E-Bass pulse. So like an electric bass or guitar, or Rhodes or a clav. For these wavetables, they kinda have the texture like a wired string. So you could put this one in multiple categories. Or right below that Modern Talking This one also has a kind of metallic or distorted sound. Let’s check out a couple Gentle Speech, and our position knob changes the vowel. These are wavetables that have a kinda vowel vocalesque sound to them. Couple examples are Crusher, or right below it Reducer Next category is Formant. If you remember the Bitcrusher down here, it’s a really nasty, almost kinda papery digital kind of distortion, it’s different from the sort of warm distortion that we’re used to. First one is these Drives, or a nastier example with Dirty Needle And the position knob just giving a sort of a different tone within that distortion. These are waveforms that sound like they’ve been put through distortion. These are wavetables that have the kind of metallic tone you can get from FM or ring mod like, escalation, or Sonic. That’s our Square-Saw or Sin-Triangle or Sin-PWM. So the first one was subtractive, which we’ve covered already. Let’s look at some examples from each of these categories. Simply just click a box and it’ll show you the wavetables that have that attribute in Massive. You’ll see they’re grouped into nine categories like distorted and metallic and organ. And you can check them out on Syntorial’s website. I find these categories are not particularly helpful. So I found that re-categorizing these into sound attributes really helps kinda understand and get your brain kinda wrapped around all the wavetable options that we have here. You know, it’s hard to know exactly what these are gonna sound like the way we know a saw and a square is going to sound like. But with this many, it almost starts to feel like you’re working with presets. And at the end of the day, it really boils down to experimentation, just kinda going through them, getting familiar with them, finding the sound that works for the patch that you’re making. So as you already know, you’ve got a ton of wavetable options here in Massive. We also have lesson packs for Sylenth1, Z3TA+ 2 and the Minimoog Voyager, at the time of the making of this video. Download that, and you’ll get the first four videos. You go into this drop down, download lesson packs, and you’ll see here at the top the Native Instruments Massive lesson pack. And that demo comes with the first 22 Syntorial lessons, as well as a sample from each lesson pack. Click in the try for free link, downloading this Syntorial demo for Mac PC or iPad. The massive lesson pack adds 41 videos that show you how to take what you’ve learned in Syntorial and apply it to massive.Īnd you can get the first four videos free by going to. It does this using video demonstrations and interactive challenges in which you program patches on a built-in soft synth. Syntorial is a synthesizer training app that teaches you how to program synth patches by ear. What is its effect gonna be on your actual sound?Īnd this video is an excerpt from the Massive Lesson Pack for Syntorial. So that you know why you would actually use these things in a musical sense. Instead of talking about this in a mathematic sense, I’m gonna give it to you in a more musical and pragmatic way. In this video, I’m going to be showing you how the wavetables, wavetable position and intensity work in Massive. Get 4 more Massive videos for free via the Syntorial demo. This video is an excerpt from the Massive Lesson Pack for Syntorial, which contains 41 videos, over 2 hours of footage, and covers every inch of Massive. To find your way through Massive’s huge list of wavetables check out the Massive Wavetable By Attribute tool. Watch Joe Hanley, the creator of Syntorial, as he guides you through Massive’s Wavetables and their related controls.
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