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Octave Divider

A sound generation technique used in many electronic organs and string machines involves twelve oscillators which generate each note in the highest octave of the instrument. The signal (usually a square wave) from each oscillator is then passed to circuitry which acts as a mathematical divider, producing an output which sounds an octave lower, and this process is repeated for as many octaves the instrument is required to play. In this way all notes are available all the time, and the tuning between octaves is completely locked and stable.

Duophonic

The ability to play two notes at once. Some dual-oscillator mono-synths allow the keyboard to generate two control voltages (from the lowest and highest keys played) which are routed to separate oscillators allowing two notes to be played simultaneously (see Paraphonic). For example, the ARP Odyssey and the Moog Subsequent are both duophonic synths.

Polyphonic

In the context of musical instruments, the term polyphonic refers to the number of notes that an instrument can play simultaneously. Most poly-synths can play up to 6 or 8 notes at a time, some 16 or 32, and others many more depending on the technology involved.

Bass Reflex

A bass reflex loudspeaker employs a cabinet with a vent (or port) which allows some of the energy from the rear of the driver unit's diaphgram to supplement that from the front at low frequencies, improving the overall efficiency and allow a greater bass extension (but with a steeper roll-off) for a given size of cabinet.

PreSonus Studio One 5.2
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Studio One 5.2 released

Update adds improved handling of articulations, drum and tabulature scoring, enhanced Show Page and more.

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