Calling All Patch GURUS!

Forum for Fantom-S/S88, Fantom-X6/7/8, Fantom-XR and Fantom-Xa
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musicMechanic101
Posts: 11
Joined: 18:56, 22 November 2006
Location: Bath (uk)

Calling All Patch GURUS!

Post by musicMechanic101 »

I've got a Roland Fantom X and at the moment I seem to have some sort of filter sweep ghost that I can't get rid of!
The patch in particular is the Deep Wine Patch: PR - G 067 , but saying that I've had this problem before.
Basically I would love to know if anybody does know, how to get rid of this low pass filter sweep that seems to hide within patches.
I'll be playing a synth line for say 15 seconds, and then all of a sudden the sound will change for a while, before magically returning back to the original sound, and all i'm doing is playing.
I have tried changing the values in patch edit with envelope filters and all sorts of things, but i just CANT get rid of it!
All i want is a patch that remains consistant, i'm recording parts at the moment, and its so annoying not having any control over a good patch that has some strange envelope or filter sweep built into.

Please somebody help!

Many Thanks

:) Sam

MusicMechanic
Mans
Posts: 30
Joined: 15:06, 22 October 2006

Re: Calling All Patch GURUS!

Post by Mans »

Sounds like some of the tones within the patch have a LFO assigned to them. The LFO1 and LFO2 screens are where you can turn them off.
Roger Fairley
Posts: 11
Joined: 19:30, 24 February 2006

Learn your dry wave tones first.

Post by Roger Fairley »

Hey,

That patch consists of 3 tones.(1,2,3)
Tone 1 doesn't have an LFO assigned.
Tone 2 (WAVE- B-188_Lost Paradise is a sampled LFO'd WaveForm). You can't change it. It's in the sample.
Tone 3 (WAVE- B-189 Morph Shape) same here, the LFO is in the raw waveform(Sample). Can't change it.

When you get some time, Init a patch.
Click the patch edit button.
Select "Pro Edit" on screen.
Scroll down 1 to "WAVE"
There you will find all the raw Waveforms(Samples) that are the building blocks of the Fantom Sounds.

P.S. - If your trying to sample the sounds to re-create them in a software sample player or something of that nature, just record each tone separately, loop each tone at the obvious loop points and your ready to go.

Just an old fart who's been screwing with this stuff since the 70's.
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