Chromatic
A scale of pitches rising or falling in semitone steps.
A scale of pitches rising or falling in semitone steps.
An effect created by doubling a signal and adding delay and pitch modulation, intended to make a single source sound more like an ensemble.
Three or more different musical notes played at the same time.
A slang term for an Integrated Circuit or IC.
A term describing the process whereby a follower device attempts to synchronise itself with a master device. In the context of a MIDI sequence, Chase may also involve chasing events - looking back to earlier positions in the song to see if there are any program change or other events that need to be acted upon.
A path carrying audio or data. In the context of a mixing console a channel is a single strip of controls relating to one input. In the context of MIDI, Channel refers to one of 16 possible data channels over which MIDI data may be sent. The organisation of data by channels means that up to 16 different MIDI instruments or parts may be addressed using a single cable.
A device capable of recording data onto blank CD-R discs.
A recordable type of Compact Disc that can only be recorded once and it can't be erased or reused. The CD-R’s technical characteristics are defined in the ‘Orange Book’
A specific form of polar response of a unidirectional microphone or loudspeaker. It is an inverted heart-shape which has very low sensitivity at the back (180 degrees), but only slightly reduced sensitivity (typically between 3 and 6dB) at the sides (90/270 degrees).
(Also known as a Carbon Button Microphone). An obsolete form of microphone in which carbon granules are contained between two metal contact plates, one of which acts as the diaphragm and moves in response to sound waves. The microphone has to be biased with a DC voltage which causes a current to pass from one metal contact plate, through the carbon granules, to the other metal contact plate. The varying pressure exerted on the carbon granules by the moving diaphgram causes a varying resistance and thus a varying current which is analogous to the sound waves. Carbon Button Microphones were used in the very early days of sound recording and broadcasting, as well as in domestic telephones up until the 1980s when electret capsules became more commonplace.