cmhodge Posted January 10, 2022 Share Posted January 10, 2022 I'm having a lot of fun trying all the different voices on my new CT-S400. I downloaded the manual and have a list of the voices. Is there somewhere I can get more background on these voices, either from Casio or someone else? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brad Saucier Posted January 10, 2022 Share Posted January 10, 2022 Can you be more specific? What do you want to know about each tone? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cmhodge Posted January 10, 2022 Author Share Posted January 10, 2022 Anything really, since CASIO says next to nothing about them! At the moment, I'm wondering about What are DSP voices, how are they different from the non-DSP? Which ones are dynamically sampled (when you hit key harder, the timbre changes, not just the volume)? What is the difference between different versions of the same voice, like Jazz Guitar 1, Jazz Guitar 2, Jazz Guitar 3 etc? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brad Saucier Posted January 10, 2022 Share Posted January 10, 2022 DSP tones are those which use digital signal processing to add effects like amp simulations, distortion and overdrive, phasers or flangers, and more. Timbre changes on some tones by velocity sensitive sample switching, some by velocity sensitive filtering, or a combination of both. Different versions of similar tones can be any number of things. They can be using different effects, different velocity sensing, filtering, ADSR values, LFO values, different samples from the same instrument (like different pickup positions on a guitar), and possibly more. 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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