- Guides, tutorials and docs
- Learning the Woovebox
- The very basics
- Quick start tutorial and video
- Tempo and BPM
- Tracks
- Patterns
- Live pattern recording
- Conditional triggering and modification
- Chords
- Arpeggios
- Scales and modes
- Genres
- Patches and Presets
- Sound design
- Paraphonic parts
- Multi-instrument mode
- Risers, fallers, sweeps & ear candy
- Live mode
- Song mode
- Full song writing
- Sampler & vocoder
- Sidechaining, gating, ducking and compression
- Mastering
- Lo-fi & vintage analog and digital emulation
- Randomization
- Hall effect sensor playing
- Advanced techniques
- Undo
- Boot modes
- MIDI, Sync and connecting other gear
- Remote control expander mode
- Wireless MIDI
- Battery and charging
- Hardware quirks and limitations
- Understanding DSP load
- Looking after your Woovebox
- Firmware updates
- Glob Gobal page
- rEvb
You may also be interested in...
- Floyd Steinberg: "Woovebox: step-by-step guide and brief review" (under Video resources, tutorials and reviews)
A guide on how to make a track, and brief review by Floyd Steinberg.
- 6. noi.c Noise Character (under Glob (song globals) page)
Sets the character of the artificially introduced noise floor.
- Using Teenage Engineering OP-1 / OP-Z sample kits (under Sampler & vocoder)
Your Woovebox is partially compatible with Teenage Engineering OP-1 / OP-Z sample kit (aka "drum kit") AIFF files.
- 10. bt.Cr bit crush (under Glob Gobal page)
Two types of bit crushing can be selected; pre- or post-filter/clip distortion.
- Lo-fi & vintage analog and digital emulation (under Guides, tutorials and docs)
Here too, the sounds your Woovebox produces can be made to - just like the vintage analog drum computers - never be 100% the same on every trigger.
- Guides, tutorials and docs
- Learning the Woovebox
- The very basics
- Quick start tutorial and video
- Tempo and BPM
- Tracks
- Patterns
- Live pattern recording
- Conditional triggering and modification
- Chords
- Arpeggios
- Scales and modes
- Genres
- Patches and Presets
- Sound design
- Paraphonic parts
- Multi-instrument mode
- Risers, fallers, sweeps & ear candy
- Live mode
- Song mode
- Full song writing
- Sampler & vocoder
- Sidechaining, gating, ducking and compression
- Mastering
- Lo-fi & vintage analog and digital emulation
- Randomization
- Hall effect sensor playing
- Advanced techniques
- Undo
- Boot modes
- MIDI, Sync and connecting other gear
- Remote control expander mode
- Wireless MIDI
- Battery and charging
- Hardware quirks and limitations
- Understanding DSP load
- Looking after your Woovebox
- Firmware updates