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Basic operation – Dave Smith Instruments MOPHO SE User Manual

Page 11

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5

Basic Operation

If you’re familiar with analog, subtractive synthesis there shouldn’t be anything

that looks terribly foreign or strange about Mopho’s front panel. All of the basic

building blocks are there. But one of the challenges of making a compact synth

is giving the user access to all the parameters within a limited amount of panel

area. Mopho has most of the parameters of the Prophet ’08, plus a couple more,

with a front panel that is more than 55% smaller!

Fortunately, several of the synth components have similar control requirements.

For example, Mopho has two oscillators and both oscillators have identical

control parameters. With a switch to select oscillator 1 or 2, one set of controls

can do double duty. Another set of controls handles most of the parameters for

all three envelope generators. And you can select both oscillators or all three

envelopes to edit a parameter simultaneously in all of them.

Other, less frequently used parameter names appear in light gray above the

corresponding knob or switch. Turn on Shift to access those parameters.

And finally, program-level parameters that are not typically performance

oriented are found in the Miscellaneous Parameters section.

The front panel is arranged so that the basic signal path components are in order

from left to right in the row closest to the keyboard: oscillators into mixer into

filter. (The VCA is the last part of the signal chain, but other than the Amplifier

Envelope, the only other control directly associated with the VCA is VCA

Level, which is in Miscellaneous Parameters.) The second row consists of

various modulators, including envelopes, LFOs, and the sequencer. The

remaining programmable parameters are for turning the arpeggiator and

sequencer on and off, setting the tempo and note value, and the aforementioned

Miscellaneous Parameters.

Non-Programmable Controls
The front panel controls can be divided into two groups, programmable and non-

programmable. Everything contained within a gray “module” is programmable.

The non-programmable controls are for things like selecting programs and

transposing the keyboard. Their state—on, off, transposed, whatever—is not

saved along with the program.

Transpose

—Allows the keyboard to be transposed in one octave increments

two octaves up or down. When transposed one octave, the corresponding LED

will be lighted, but dim. If the LED is brightly lit, Mopho is transposed two

octaves.

Shift

—Used to access the shifted parameters.