Decay Segment; Release Segments; Loop Type - Kurzweil Forte SE Musician's Manual

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Program Edit Mode
The Amplitude Envelope (AMPENV) Page
Attack segments 2 and 3 affect the sound only when you set a nonzero value for time. They
will then move to their assigned levels in the time specified. Their starting levels are equal to
the final levels of the preceding segment.

Decay Segment

The decay section has only one segment. It has values for time and level, just as for the attack
section. The decay section begins as soon as the attack section has been completed. It starts
at the same amplitude level as the attack segment preceding it, and moves to its assigned
level in the time specified. You'll hear a note's decay section only when the attack section is
completed before a Note Off message is generated for that note.
To create a sustaining envelope, simply set the Decay segment's level to a nonzero value.

Release Segments

Like the attack and decay sections, each of the three segments in the release section has
values for time and level. Each segment reaches its assigned level in the time specified for
that segment. Release segment 1 starts at the Note Off event for each note, at the current
amplitude level of that note—whether it's in the attack section or the decay section. It then
moves to its assigned level in the time specified. Release segments 2 and 3 start at the final
levels of the segments before them.
Release segments 1 and 2 can be set to any level from 0 to 150%. Release segment 3
always has a level of 0%, so you can't adjust its level. In place of its Level parameter you see
a parameter that lets you toggle between User envelopes and the sound's preprogrammed
natural envelope.

Loop Type

There are seven different values for Loop type.
A value of Off disables looping for the current layer's amplitude envelope.
Values of seg1F, seg2F, and seg3F are forward loops. In each case, the amplitude envelope
plays through the attack and decay sections, then loops back to the beginning of the first,
second, or third attack segments, respectively.
Values of seg1B, seg2B, and seg3B, are bidirectional loops. The amplitude envelope plays
through the attack and decay sections, then reverses and plays backward to the beginning of
the first, second, or third attack segment, respectively. When it reaches the beginning of the
assigned attack segment, it reverses again, playing forward to the end of the decay section,
and so on.
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