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#168911 - 12/13/01 10:45 PM
Re: What is an arpeggiator?
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/10/00
Posts: 2195
Loc: Catskill Mountains, NY
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Gunnar Johnny is on the right track for sure. An arpeggio can be described as a chord played one note at a time. In other words, instead of strumming or striking all of the notes at once, the player ( or keyboard in this case ) picks each note individually. An arpeggiator can take a note( reading it as a chord type ..usually it was in the major scale as I remember from my MZ2000 ) or a chord itself that you play, and plays it one note at a time at regular intervals ( 1/4 notes/ or 1/8 notes or..etc ). Which direction it plays, ( up, down, or both up and down )and how many octaves it covers is normally predetermined by the user and has to be setup beforehand. Usually in an arpeggiator, these notes are played in a very mechanical fashion ( perfect timing, with no rests or change in note lengths in between ), but there could be some variations depending on the types of arpeggios your keyboard will produce. Hope this gives you some idea.
AJ
[This message has been edited by Bluezplayer (edited 12-13-2001).]
_________________________
AJ
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