- Genres
- Chiptune
Chiptune
Chiptune is characterized by low polyphony, basic waveforms and few effects (if any).
Due to chords being difficult to play with low polyphony, this is often compensated for by very fast arpeggiation of a chord on a single channel. This creates the illusion of chords playing, while only occupying one channel/voice. Alternatively, chords are "played" by playing only some notes that make up the chords, and not playing all of them.
Depending on the hardware era targeted, sounds may vary from basic square waves to rudimentary FM synthesis, sometimes even augmented by short lo-fi sampled instruments or one-shots.
In all cases, it is recommended to use multi-instrument mode for the number of tracks you intend to use. This helps you restrict your composition to a limited polyphony.
You may also be interested in...
- Chords (under Guides, tutorials and docs)
'h7' half-diminished 7th (augmented minor 7th) (4 notes).
- Hardware quirks and limitations (under Guides, tutorials and docs)
The USB-C port on your Woovebox is used for charging only.
- 2nd octave (under Mapping)
- 1st octave (under Mapping)
- Levels, VU Metering & monitoring (under Sampler & vocoder)
VU ("volume unit") metering is a useful tool to ensure the levels coming into the audio input are not too soft, nor too loud.