Program P9: AMS Mixer 9–1: AMS Mixer
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Program P9: AMS Mixer
The AMS Mixers combine two AMS sources into one,
or process an AMS source to make it into something
new.
For instance, they can add two AMS sources together,
or use one AMS source to scale the amount of another.
You can also use them to modify the response of
realtime controllers.
The AMS Mixer outputs appear in the list of AMS
sources, just like other controllers.
This also means that the original, unmodified inputs to
the AMS Mixers are still available as well. For instance,
if you use Aftertouch as an input to a AMS Mixer, you
can use the processed version of the Aftertouch to
control one AMS destination, and the original version
to control another.
Finally, you can cascade the two AMS Mixers together,
by using AMS Mixer 1 as an input to AMS Mixer 2.
9–1: AMS Mixer
9–1a: AMS Mixer 1
Mixer Type [A+B, Amt AxB, Offset, Smoothing,
Shape, Quantize]
This controls the type of processing performed by AMS
Mixer 1. Each of the Mixer Types is discussed in detail
elsewhere in the manual.
A+B adds two AMS sources together. For more
information, see “A+B” on page 90.
Amt Ax B scales the amount of one AMS source with
the other. See “Amt A x B” on page 90 for more details.
Offset adds or subtracts a constant value to or from an
AMS source. For more information, see “Offset” on
page 91.
Smoothing creates more gentle transitions between
values, smoothing out abrupt changes such as a quick
move on a joystick or a sharp edge on an LFO. For
details, see “Smoothing” on page 91.
Shape adds curvature to the AMS input. For an in-
depth description, see “Shape” on page 92.
Quantize turns smooth transitions into discrete steps.
See “Quantize” on page 93 for more information.
Gate chooses between two AMS inputs (or fixed
values) based on a third AMS source. See “Gate” on
page 93 for more information.
9–1b: AMS Mixer 2
This is the second AMS Mixer. Its parameters are
exactly the same as those of AMS Mixer 1, above.
▼ 9–1: Page Menu Commands
The number before each command shows its ENTER +
number-key shortcut. For more information on these
shortcuts, see “ENTER + 0-9: shortcuts for menu
commands” on page 138.
• 0: Write Program. For more information, see “Write
Program” on page 138.
• 1: Exclusive Solo. For more information, see
“Exclusive Solo” on page 138.
9–1PMC
9–1b
9–1a