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Dagger Synth by BeepStreet (Released)

18911131416

Comments

  • edited August 2023

    @NeuM said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    Experiment, duh. I’m sorry but you’re being too dense and “academic” here and I’m being childlike and simple and that’s the disconnect. But never discount the wisdom of children.

    For somebody who is preaching being child like. I don’t think you can remember how it feel to not known what all those synth knobs do.

    No, I do. We were probably just very different children.

    Well I am 50 and learning synthesis with very limited time and energy.

    LOL. You're younger than a lot of us here. The point with music is to have fun, so if you don't enjoy it or want to explore, why bother?

    Our goals a very different. My goal is writing music. All I need is enough knowledge of a synth to modify a preset that don’t sound right for the part.

  • @ecou said:

    @NeuM said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    Experiment, duh. I’m sorry but you’re being too dense and “academic” here and I’m being childlike and simple and that’s the disconnect. But never discount the wisdom of children.

    For somebody who is preaching being child like. I don’t think you can remember how it feel to not known what all those synth knobs do.

    No, I do. We were probably just very different children.

    Well I am 50 and learning synthesis with very limited time and energy.

    LOL. You're younger than a lot of us here. The point with music is to have fun, so if you don't enjoy it or want to explore, why bother?

    Our goals a very different. My goal is writing music. All I need is enough knowledge of a synth to modify a preset that don’t sound right for the part.

    Are you a working composer/musician? Then I can see why you'd want a more focused lesson on learning about synthesis. I'd recommend YouTube for the general concepts and then you'll be able to use them faster in practice. Keep in mind, until people start making tutorial videos for your specific synth, you're on your own unless someone else here is able to answer every question you come up with. But for my money, using the thing repeatedly and experimenting is the best way to learn for me.

  • edited August 2023

    @scraf said:
    Can anyone tell me what the green half circle bottom right does ? ( Midi learn, assign knob mode )

    It allows you to control one parameter outside of the synth in AUM. See pic.

    See how it’s to the left of Zeeon, you can change it to any parameter, but can only have one of those per instance/app in AUM.

  • edited August 2023

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    Experiment, duh. I’m sorry but you’re being too dense and “academic” here and I’m being childlike and simple and that’s the disconnect. But never discount the wisdom of children.

    For somebody who is preaching being child like. I don’t think you can remember how it feel to not known what all those synth knobs do.

    No, I do. We were probably just very different children.

    Well I am 50 and learning synthesis with very limited time and energy.

    I feel you. I’m 38 but I’m a bipolar narcoleptic who sleeps 15-16 hours a day, so I’ve almost literally lived my life in half-scale since I was 17. It’s just really important to not get buried by life and feel that childlike curiosity when you do get a chance to play, I think.

  • @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    Experiment, duh. I’m sorry but you’re being too dense and “academic” here and I’m being childlike and simple and that’s the disconnect. But never discount the wisdom of children.

    For somebody who is preaching being child like. I don’t think you can remember how it feel to not known what all those synth knobs do.

    No, I do. We were probably just very different children.

    Well I am 50 and learning synthesis with very limited time and energy.

    I feel you. I’m 38 but I’m a bipolar narcoleptic who sleeps 15-16 hours a day, so I’ve almost literally lived my life in half-scale since I was 17. It’s just really important to not get buried by life and feel that childlike curiosity when you do get a chance to play, I think.

    Oof sorry to hear that. I’m Bipolar as well but luckily I don’t have narcolepsy. Hope things are good with you my friend.

  • edited August 2023

    @HotStrange said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    Experiment, duh. I’m sorry but you’re being too dense and “academic” here and I’m being childlike and simple and that’s the disconnect. But never discount the wisdom of children.

    For somebody who is preaching being child like. I don’t think you can remember how it feel to not known what all those synth knobs do.

    No, I do. We were probably just very different children.

    Well I am 50 and learning synthesis with very limited time and energy.

    I feel you. I’m 38 but I’m a bipolar narcoleptic who sleeps 15-16 hours a day, so I’ve almost literally lived my life in half-scale since I was 17. It’s just really important to not get buried by life and feel that childlike curiosity when you do get a chance to play, I think.

    Oof sorry to hear that. I’m Bipolar as well but luckily I don’t have narcolepsy. Hope things are good with you my friend.

    Appreciate it. Hope you stay in check as well. Never stops being hard.

  • edited August 2023

    @Luxthor said:
    I understand for old people like @dendy, 😉 he used to work with cables in sparsely lighted rooms without internet connection and espresso coffee. But I don't understand young modern ones.

    >

    🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    dammit !! i’m not THAT old, i started my musical journey in era of trackers, not during rise of Bob Moog and Don Buchla🤣😂🤣😂

    interestingly, i realised i don’t like classic hw modular with cables in reality - after my short experiment with HW modular i realised it’s not for me and already selling it ..

    BTW, I don’t blame anyone, after all, I’m the guy who wears sandals with socks in the summer. 🤪

    You are from Czech republic ???? 😂

  • @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    I'm with you, synths or any app really, should have a manual. Doesn't this have one? But yeah, imo the people saying just tweak and see are not really being helpful here

  • @dendy said:

    @Luxthor said:
    I understand for old people like @dendy, 😉 he used to work with cables in sparsely lighted rooms without internet connection and espresso coffee. But I don't understand young modern ones.

    >

    🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    dammit !! i’m not THAT old, i started my musical journey in era of trackers, not during rise of Bob Moog and Don Buchla🤣😂🤣😂

    interestingly, i realised i don’t like classic hw modular with cables in reality - after my short experiment with HW modular i realised it’s not for me and already selling it ..

    BTW, I don’t blame anyone, after all, I’m the guy who wears sandals with socks in the summer. 🤪

    You are from Czech republic ???? 😂

    Hahaha

  • wimwim
    edited August 2023

    @Poppadocrock said:
    I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    I'll take a stab at answering this. Just a few points:

    Let's cut to the chase - Dagger is a cutting edge synth. It has killer filters that can take the edge off of overly sharp tones with surgical precision to carve out the perfect sound. Or open up them up to cut through the mix like a knife. No matter how you slice it, Dagger Synth will give your tracks an edge like no other. Its design is pared down to shave complexity. You won't be whittling away your time either as you hone your skills with Dagger. Stick it on any track! It's a real Swiss Army Knife of a synth. Dagger literally slays the competition. Nobody, but nobody, will poke fun at your Dagger tracks. What would be the point?

    Just get it! You'll enjoy it to the hilt!

  • Haha. Sharp! Very sharp!

  • @wim said:

    @Poppadocrock said:
    I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    I'll take a stab at answering this. Just a few points:

    Let's cut to the chase - Dagger is a cutting edge synth. It has killer filters that can take the edge off of overly sharp tones with surgical precision to carve out the perfect sound. Or open up them up to really cut through the mix. No matter how you slice it, Dagger Synth will give your tracks an edge like no other. Its design is pared down to shave complexity. You won't be whittling away your time either as you hone your skills with Dagger. Stick it on any track! It's a real Swiss Army Knife of a synth. Dagger literally slays the competition. Nobody, but nobody, will poke fun at your Dagger tracks. What would be the point?

    Just get it! You'll enjoy it to the hilt!

    🤣🤣🤣

  • @wim said:

    @Poppadocrock said:
    I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    I'll take a stab at answering this. Just a few points:

    Let's cut to the chase - Dagger is a cutting edge synth. It has killer filters that can take the edge off of overly sharp tones with surgical precision to carve out the perfect sound. Or open up them up to really cut through the mix. No matter how you slice it, Dagger Synth will give your tracks an edge like no other. Its design is pared down to shave complexity. You won't be whittling away your time either as you hone your skills with Dagger. Stick it on any track! It's a real Swiss Army Knife of a synth. Dagger literally slays the competition. Nobody, but nobody, will poke fun at your Dagger tracks. What would be the point?

    Just get it! You'll enjoy it to the hilt!

    Did you use an AI to write this with as many dagger similes, metaphors etc as possible? 😂

  • wimwim
    edited August 2023

    @Gavinski said:
    Did you use an AI to write this with as many dagger similes, metaphors etc as possible? 😂

    I was being serious. There’s no need for all these jabs.

  • @wim said:

    @Poppadocrock said:
    I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    I'll take a stab at answering this. Just a few points:

    Let's cut to the chase - Dagger is a cutting edge synth. It has killer filters that can take the edge off of overly sharp tones with surgical precision to carve out the perfect sound. Or open up them up to cut through the mix like a knife. No matter how you slice it, Dagger Synth will give your tracks an edge like no other. Its design is pared down to shave complexity. You won't be whittling away your time either as you hone your skills with Dagger. Stick it on any track! It's a real Swiss Army Knife of a synth. Dagger literally slays the competition. Nobody, but nobody, will poke fun at your Dagger tracks. What would be the point?

    Just get it! You'll enjoy it to the hilt!

    Darn, I already know you for being thorough, but this one is pure Impressionism with words! 🤩

  • @Poppadocrock said: > I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    here , allmsounds including drums is Dagger

    dwfinitely capable of drums, basses, arpeggios, leads, pads, weird fxs .. i woudl say there is not much soudn types you can’t do in some form in Dagger

  • @dendy said:

    @Poppadocrock said: > I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    here , allmsounds including drums is Dagger

    dwfinitely capable of drums, basses, arpeggios, leads, pads, weird fxs .. i woudl say there is not much soudn types you can’t do in some form in Dagger

    Nice sounds in there. Those hats really cut through the mix (although I’m listening through the iphone speakers). I like the bass and leads too

  • @dendy said:
    dammit !! i’m not THAT old, i started my musical journey in era of trackers, not during rise of Bob Moog and Don Buchla🤣😂🤣😂

    interestingly, i realised i don’t like classic hw modular with cables in reality - after my short experiment with HW modular i realised it’s not for me and already selling it ..

    I know you are probably the youngest one here, you just started to scare me with cables. ;) Even those die hard modular fans know that cables are nothing but necessary evil.

    BTW, I don’t blame anyone, after all, I’m the guy who wears sandals with socks in the summer. 🤪

    You are from Czech republic ???? 😂

    Haha! 😂 That sandals episode will hunt me through life! 😅

    One more thing, you made one hell of an Impressive all Dagger project, we can truly dagger out anything with this synth.

  • @dendy said:

    Definately got the Chemical Brothers vibe there, excellent.

    And Dagger is just what the doctor ordered, less knobs than the only hardware synth that I've had a chance of making sounds with on purpose ( Moog Sub Phatty ), and, in some way buying it helps me feel less guilty for what I paid for Drambo, which is my favourite piece of software ever.

  • Thanks for that, but another forum member sorted me almost immediately.

  • @dendy said:

    @Poppadocrock said: > I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    here , allmsounds including drums is Dagger

    dwfinitely capable of drums, basses, arpeggios, leads, pads, weird fxs .. i woudl say there is not much soudn types you can’t do in some form in Dagger

    @dendy: nice one again!

  • edited August 2023

    @dendy said:

    @Poppadocrock said: > I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    here , allmsounds including drums is Dagger

    dwfinitely capable of drums, basses, arpeggios, leads, pads, weird fxs .. i woudl say there is not much soudn types you can’t do in some form in Dagger

    Awesome demo. Those hats! 🤩

  • edited August 2023

    @Gavinski said:

    @Samu said:
    For me the 'Random' function of Dagger is neat...
    ...when it creates a 'silent' patch it's fun to investigate why to doesn't make any sound and this way I still keep on learning how it works :sunglasses:

    Good way to look at things. I love it but the randomiser results are not the best

    A common reason is that the randomizer either sets Trig to "LFO" or has set a very long attack time. In that case, do this:

  • @dendy said:

    @Poppadocrock said: > I’ve heard a few demos, but I’m curious what people think Dagger Synths strengths are in terms of types of sounds? Basses/Leads, or can it do pads, keys, plucks, etc just as well?

    I guess I’m asking what types of sounds is Dagger Synth really good at making?

    here , allmsounds including drums is Dagger

    dwfinitely capable of drums, basses, arpeggios, leads, pads, weird fxs .. i woudl say there is not much soudn types you can’t do in some form in Dagger

    Nice one!

  • @Gavinski said:

    @ecou said:

    @oat_phipps said:

    @ecou said:

    @craftycurate said:

    @Samu said:

    @ecou said:
    Is there a manual ? How’s the LFO work ?

    It's easy enough to 'get' while tweaking really.

    Best way to 'explore' Dagger is NOT by reading a manual but by tweaking it.

    Cheers!

    I can’t imagine the OP was suggesting that it’s manual reading OR tweaking? (I.e. false dichotomy)

    Informed tweaking is usually more fruitful than tweaking alone … how is less information going to help us get to grips with anything?

    @NeuM said:

    @Samu said:

    @Antos3345 said:

    @NeuM said:

    @Antos3345 said:
    Anyone can tell me how to adjust the LFO rate ? For example, if I choose lfo above the filter, I set the lfo to a waveform, but where’s the rate and amount adjustments that goes to the filter ?

    There aren’t that many knobs on this synth. play around and try to find out what works. It’s fun!

    Yeah, but somethings like this are basic stuff.

    The 'MOD' knob under each section controls the modulation intensity (ie. how much the LFO affects the parameter), the rate of the LFO is the knob next to the waveform selector with 'rate' written under it.

    There' is only one LFO that can be fed to the oscillator, filter and amp sections.
    For the oscillator you can under the MOD switch what it will modulate, for the filter it's just the cut-off, for the amp it's the level.

    I was trying to encourage them to have fun and explore on their own. Where’s the sense of adventure if people have no curiosity or initiative? Oh, well. I tried.

    You cannot always figure out everything by experimentation.

    Yes you can. It just means you might not be able to explain it in words.

    If I turn a knob. I don't hear any sound difference. Unless I have the I knowledge what other knobs interact with it or a manual. How do you suggest I find out?

    I'm with you, synths or any app really, should have a manual. Doesn't this have one? But yeah, imo the people saying just tweak and see are not really being helpful here

    👍 The manual is not out yet.

  • edited August 2023

    I'm in with something quick :)

    All sounds including drums is Dagger. 3 instances in Drambo

  • @giku_beepstreet said:
    I'm in with something quick :)

    All sounds including drums is Dagger. 3 instances in Drambo

    Amazing! @giku_beepstreet I love that the drums sounds are also Dagger.

    And apart from all of the amazing synths, groove boxes, and effects that you’ve developed, it’s really nice to hear some creative work coming from you!

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