Rotor1 And Rotor2; Vibra1 And Vibra2; Swell (Volume Swell); Fixflt (Fixed Filter) - M-Audio Black Box Addendum To Users Manual

Version 2 firmware
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Effects Increased to 121

There are never enough effects, particularly when it comes to the cool, inspiring beat-synced effects that Black Box does so well—and now we've upped the ante
from 43 to 121! Here they are, with the new ones emphasized in bold:
TREM1
Normal tremolo
TREM2
Hard-switched tremolo
TREM3
Sawtooth wave tremolo
PAN1
Normal stereo panning
PAN2
Hard-switched stereo panning
PAN3
Left-to-right only stereo panning
PAN4
Hard-switched random panning
FTREM1
Filter tremolo 1, up and down
sweeping low-pass filter
FTREM2
Filter tremolo 2, sawtooth down mod
of low-pass filter
FTREM3
Filter tremolo 3, slow up and down
band-pass filter
FTREM4
Filter tremolo 4, sawtooth up mod
of band-pass filter
FTREM5
Filter tremolo 5, switches between
low-pass frequencies
FLANG1
Slow flanger, positive phase (full
bass at top of cycle)
FLANG2
1-bar flanger, inverted phase (less
bass at top of cycle)
FLANG3
1⁄4-note flanger, inverted phase
CHORS1
Chorus 1, triangle wave, low depth
CHORS2
Chorus 2, sine wave, higher depth
ROTOR1
Rotary speaker 1, slow
ROTOR2
Rotary speaker 2, fast
VIBRA1
Vibrato 1, slow speed
VIBRA2
Vibrato 2, medium speed
RNFI 4
Random filter 1/4 notes, band-
pass filter
RNFI 8
Random filter 1/8 notes, band-pass
filter
As you can see, some of the new effects (TREM3, FTREM3-5) are variations
on existing effect types while others (PAN, ROTOR, VIBRA) are completely new
effect types. Here's a little information about the new effect types:
PAN1 - PAN4
This effect automatically moves the pan position of your instrument within the
stereo field. As in other modulation effects, the speed may be either one of a
number of fixed or beat-synced values. Use PAN1 for normal back-and-forth
panning; a speed of 1⁄4 notes is a good place to start. PAN2 hard-switches
between the left right sides; set the speed to 8 bars to "trade fours" with
yourself.

ROTOR1 and ROTOR2

This is a simulation of the classic rotary speaker effect, primarily used with organ
but also appearing on countless guitar recordings, including Cream's classic hit
"Badge." Use ROTOR1 for the slow rotary effect and ROTOR2 for the fast effect.
RNFI8T
Random filter 1/8 note triplets,
band-pass filter
RNFI16
Random filter 1/16 notes, band-pass
filter
RNFI24
Random filter 1/16 note triplets,
band-pass filter
RNFL 4
Random flanger 1⁄4 notes
RNFL8
Random flanger 1/8 notes
RNFL8T
Random flanger 1/8 note triplets
RNFL16
Random flanger 1/16 notes
RNFL24
Random flanger 1/16 note triplets
ATOWA1
Auto-wah 1 (filter frequency follows
guitar level)
ATOWA2
Auto-wah 2 (fixed attack-decay
speed)
ATOWA3
Auto-wah 3 (louder notes produce
lower filter freq)
ATOWA4
Auto-wah 4 (same as 1 but soft
filter tone)
ATOWA5
Auto-wah 5 (same as 2 but soft
filter tone)
ATOWA6
Auto-wah 6 (sharp attack, fixed
decay)
ATOWA7
Auto-wah 7 (louder notes = higher
fixed filter)
ATOWA8
Auto-wah 8 (louder notes = lower
fixed filter)
WAHPDL
Wah pedal
TKBOX1
Talk Box 1 (voice box simulator)
TKBOX2
Talk Box 2 (same as 1 but louder
notes result in lower tone)
TKBOX3
Talk Box 3 (slow attack and decay
speeds)
TKBOX4
Talk Box 4 (fast attack, slow delay
speed)
TKBOX5
Talk Box 5 (note-triggered chorus
sound)
TKBOX6
Talk Box 6 (louder notes result in
higher fixed freq)

VIBRA1 and VIBRA2

Vibrato, a periodic variation of pitch, is an effect that can add a movement to
your sound that is more subtle than chorus or flanging—kind of like continuously
moving the whammy bar on a Strat. Jazz guitarist Bill Frisell commonly plays
with vibrato on the whole time and this adds a very nice quality to his tone,
particularly when the vibrato interacts with the delay and reverb in his sound to
produce chorus-like textures.

SWELL (Volume Swell)

For best results, try to silence each note before playing the next one. Otherwise,
you'll hear a little bit of the subsequent note as the volume is very quickly being
turned down from the full level of the last note's sustain.
FIXFLT (fixed filter)
This is like having a single parametric EQ before the amp models. Use the FX FREQ
control to set the frequency and the FX WET/DRY control to set the amount.
FIXFLA (fixed flanger)
A flanger is actually a very short delay (0 to 10 ms) with feedback that moves up
and down periodically, so a fixed flanger is merely a short delay with feedback.
This can be used to achieve a sound similar to that of your amp in a small brick
room—you can even use the FX FREQ control to set the size of the room.
3
SWELL
Volume swell
FIXFLT
Fixed band-pass filter (use FX FREQ to
change frequency)
FIXFLA
Fixed flanger (use FX FREQ to change
frequency)
TLKPDL
Pedal-controlled talk box
SCIFI1
Science fiction sound FX 1
SCIFI2
Science fiction sound FX 2
SCIFI3
Science fiction sound FX 3
SCIFI4
Science fiction sound FX 4
SCIFI5
Science fiction sound FX 5
TRSQ01 – TRSQ06
First 6 tremolo sequences
TRSQ 7 – TRSQ20
14 more tremolo sequences
FLSQ 1 – FLSQ 6
First 6 filter sequences
FLSQ 7 - FLSQ20
14 more filter sequences
ARPG 1 – ARPG 6
First 6 arpeggio sequences
ARPG 1 - ARPG20
14 more arpeggio sequences
MVE2FI
MIDI velocity modulates filter freq
MNT2FI
MIDI note modulates filter freq
MMD2FI
MIDI controllers 1 (mod wheel), 11, 16, 70 or
74 modulate filter freq
MVE2FL
MIDI velocity modulates flanger freq
MNT2FL
MIDI note modulates flanger freq
MMD2FL
MIDI controllers 1 (mod wheel), 11, 16, 70 or
74 modulate flanger freq

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