By Craig Anderton | Mon, 01 Jun 2009
BETTER SOUND QUALITY
Each Element has a Quality parameter
that defaults to Std. If the patch uses
pitch sweeps, change this to Hi to minimize
aliasing. To further minimize aliasing,
click on the Options button (the
Screwdriver icon toward the upper
right) and check “Use sinc interpolation
when freezing/rendering.”
RAPTURE MEETS MIDI GUITAR
Click on the Options button. Check “Set
Program as Multitimbral” so Rapture elements
1–6 receive MIDI channels 1–6,
which can correspond to guitar strings
1–6. For the most realistic feel where playing
a new note cuts off an existing note
sounding on the same string, set each element’s
Polyphony to 0 (monophonic with
legato mode), and Porta Time to 0.0.
ENABLING PORTAMENTO
Portamento is available only if an Element’s
Polyphony = 0. If Polyphony = 1,
only one voice can sound (monophonic
mode), but without legato or the option
to add portamento.
MULTI OPTION DETAILS
An Element’s Multi option can thicken
an oscillator without using up
polyphony. However, it works only
with short wavetables, not longer
samples or SFZ files.
ACCEPTABLE FILE FORMATS
Each Element can consist of a WAV,
AIF, or SFZ multisample definition file.
SFZ files can use WAV, AIF, or OGG
files. Samples can be virtually any bit
depth or sample rate, mono or stereo,
and looped or one-shot.
MELODIC SEQUENCES
When step sequencing Pitch, quantize
to semitones by snapping to 12 levels
or 24 levels (right-click in the
sequencer to select).
CHAINING ELEMENTS FOR
COMMON FX
You can route an oscillator (with its own
DSP settings) through the next-highernumbered
Element’s EQ and Effects by
right-clicking on the lower-numbered
Element number and selecting “Chain to
Next Element.” (You can’t do this with
Element 6 because there is no highernumbered
element.)
SMOOTHER HALL REVERB
If you select Large Hall as a Master FX,
create a smoother sound by loading the
Small Hall into Global FX 1 and the Mid
Hall into Global FX 2. Trim the reverb
filter cutoffs to “soften” the overall
reverb timbre.
KNOB DEFAULT VALUES
Double-click on a knob to return it to
its default value.
THE PROGRAMMER’S FRIEND:
THE LIMITER
When programming sounds with
high resonance or distortion, enable
the Limiter to prevent unpleasant
sonic surprises.
THE MOUSE WHEEL
The wheel can turn a selected knob up
or down, change the level of all steps
in a step sequence, scroll quickly
through LFO waveforms, zoom in and
out on envelopes, and more. Hold the
Shift key for finer resolution, or the
Ctrl key for larger jumps.
FINEST KNOB RESOLUTION
Use the left/right arrow keys to edit a
knob setting with five times the resolution
of just click/dragging with the
mouse.
NEW LOOK WITH NEW SKINS
In the Rapture folder under Program Files,
the Resources folder has bit-mapped files
for Rapture graphic elements (e.g., background,
knobs, etc.). Modify these to give
Rapture a different look.
COLLABORATING ON SOUNDS
To exchange files with someone who
doesn’t have the same audio files
used for an SFZ definition file, send
the audio files separately and have
your collaborator install them in Rapture’s
Sample Pool library. This is
where Rapture looks for “missing”
SFZ files.
FIT ENVELOPE TO WINDOW
If the envelope goes out of range of
the window, click on the strip just above
the envelope graph, and choose Fit.
SET ENVELOPE LOOP START POINT
Place the mouse over the desired node and
type “L” on your QWERTY keyboard. Similarly,
to set the Loop End/Sustain point,
place the mouse over a node and type “S.”
CHANGE AN ENVELOPE CURVE
TO EXPONENTIAL
Place the mouse over the end node of a
line segment, and type “N.”
CHANGE LFO PHASE
Hold down the Shift key, click on the LFO
waveform, and drag left or right.
ADDING CUSTOM LFO WAVEFORMS
Store WAV files (8 to 32-bit, any sample
rate or length) in the LFO Waveforms
folder (located in the Rapture program
folder). Name each WAV consecutively,
starting with LfoWaveform020.wav, then
LfoWaveform021.wav, etc.
CHOOSING THE LFO WAVEFORM
Click to choose the next higher-numbered
waveform or right-click to choose the
next lower-numbered waveform. But it’s
faster to right-click above the LFO waveform
display, and choose the desired LFO
waveform from a pop-up menu.
PARAMETER KEYTRACKING
The Keytracking window under the LFO
graph affects a selected parameter (Pitch,
Cut 1, Res 1, etc.) based on the keyboard
note. Adjust keytracking by dragging the
starting and ending nodes. Example: If
Cut 1 is selected and the keytracking line
starts low and goes high, the cutoff will
be lower on lower keys and higher with
higher keys. If the line starts high and
goes low, the cutoff will be higher on
lower keys and lower with higher keys.
CHANGE KEYTRACKING CURVE
Click on the Keytrack line and drag up or
down to change the shape.
TRY OUT DIFFERENT STEP
SEQUENCER PATTERNS
Click within the step sequencer. Each
time you type “N,” it generates a new
random pattern.
CHOOSE AN ALTERNATE TUNING
Click on the Pitch button for the
Element you want to tune. Click in the
Keytrack window and select the desire
Scala tuning file.