Getting to grips with VirSyn microTERA
With winter here what better way to wile away those long, dark evenings than honing your synthesis skills, Pete Crisp goes modular with VirSyn’s microTERA.
As a prelude to the release of Version 2 of VirSyn’s software modular synth TERA, we’re going to take a look at some of the features on offer and the method of programming a couple of basic sounds. If you haven’t already got TERA, don’t panic – we’ve included a pared-down but fully functioning Mac and PC version on the CD this month for you to get your teeth into. microTERA, as the baby of the bunch is known, operates as either a standalone or VST instrument and comes with three detuneable oscillators and an additive waveshaper that includes all the classic waveforms. Also included are a pair of LFOs and two multi-segment envelope generators, so there’s plenty of opportunity to create sounds from scratch. Functionality across the two platforms also remains relatively consistent, so the tutorial works well whichever you’re using. Be aware, though, that where you would right-click a window on a PC to access a parameter, Mac users should instead use [Ctrl]+click.
This feature first appeared in Music Tech Magazine issue 09
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Software Workshops
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