Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 2:07 pm
What I've noticed with the Moog filter AGC on my Voyager is that it sucks the low end out of the sound. What I've done to compensate for this is to simply dedicate one osc to back fill the low end.
What I do is lower all of the osc levels to about 1/4 as a starting point. I then set one osc to a lower octave range than the others, setting its waveform to a pure triangle, in order to eliminate upper harmonics. After that I bring the level of that one osc back up in the mix, just to the point where bottom end reinforcement starts to return to the sound. Since that low end reinforcement can be subtle, I try to balance it so that it isn't overpowering the lead oscs. I then experiment with moving that osc's waveform back towards a sawtooth, with the goal of bringing a little edge to the low end without losing the reinforcement it brings to the overall sound. Sometimes I just leave it as a pure triangle. I then tweak and adjust all of the osc levels until I have the balance between them that I desire.
Admittedly, with the LP, you end up with one osc for the lead sounds. However, it might still be worth experimenting with.
I hope this helps, at least a little bit.
Bob
What I do is lower all of the osc levels to about 1/4 as a starting point. I then set one osc to a lower octave range than the others, setting its waveform to a pure triangle, in order to eliminate upper harmonics. After that I bring the level of that one osc back up in the mix, just to the point where bottom end reinforcement starts to return to the sound. Since that low end reinforcement can be subtle, I try to balance it so that it isn't overpowering the lead oscs. I then experiment with moving that osc's waveform back towards a sawtooth, with the goal of bringing a little edge to the low end without losing the reinforcement it brings to the overall sound. Sometimes I just leave it as a pure triangle. I then tweak and adjust all of the osc levels until I have the balance between them that I desire.
Admittedly, with the LP, you end up with one osc for the lead sounds. However, it might still be worth experimenting with.
I hope this helps, at least a little bit.
Bob