Propellerhead Reason Spécifications Page 214

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BV512 VOCODER
212
10. Route MIDI to the carrier device by clicking in the MIDI symbol col-
umn for its track in the sequencer.
11. Play a chord or a note on your MIDI keyboard.
What you hear now is the vocoded sound, e.g. the carrier sound processed
to have the same tonal characteristics as the modulator.
12. Try the different filter band options and note the difference in
sound.
13. You can also adjust the vocoder sound by clicking and dragging the
bars in the lower display.
Each bar corresponds to a frequency band, with low frequencies to the left
and high frequencies to the right. You adjust the level of a band by dragging
its bar up or down. Clicking and dragging across the bars allow you to
change the levels of several bars, much like drawing an eq curve.
The upper display shows the spectrum of the modulator signal, for display only.
D To reset a band to ±0 dB, press [Command] (Mac) or [Ctrl] (Win)
and click on it.
You can also reset all bands to zero by bringing up the context menu for the
Vocoder device and selecting “Reset Band Levels”.
14. If the vocoder sound is “muddy” or indistinct, try raising the “HF
Emph” knob on the Vocoder.
This parameter (High Frequency Emphasis) boosts the high frequencies in
the carrier signal.
15. Try out the other parameters if you like.
See page 214 for details.
That’s it - a basic vocoder setup!
Vocoded vocals
The most common usage for a vocoder is probably the typical “singing” or “talk-
ing synth” sound, using vocals or speech as modulator. Since Reason doesn’t
support live audio input you cannot sing and play in real time - instead you need
to use sampled speech or vocals (with e.g. an NN-19 or NN-XT as the modulator
device). The procedure for this is roughly the same as in the tutorial above, but
this time you need to record or enter some notes in the sequencer for the mod-
ulator device (since the samplers don’t have pattern or Preview playback).
Here’s a quick guideline:
1. Create the carrier device.
2. Select the carrier device and create a BV512 vocoder.
3. Select the BV512 and create the modulator device (typically an NN-
19 or NN-XT sampler device).
4. Load the vocals or speech samples into the sampler device and as-
sign them to keyzones as desired.
For details about using sampler devices, see the respective device chapter.
5. Record or enter some notes on the sequencer track for the sampler
device, so that the vocal samples are played back where you want
them in the song.
To hear the unprocessed sound of the sampler device, set the Dry/Wet con-
trol on the BV512 to “Dry”, as above. When you’re done, turn the control
back to “Wet” to get the vocoded sound.
6. Route MIDI to the carrier device.
7. Start sequencer playback and play notes or chords on your MIDI
keyboard.
The result will be the classic vocoded vocal sound.
8. At this point you may want to record the notes or chords you play
for the carrier device.
As MIDI is already routed to the carrier device track, all you need to do is
start recording and play along.
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