v. 2.0
OWNER’S MANUAL !
INTRODUCTION
Thank you for purchasing the DCP Productions “MO SKOOL 2 V2” sound library for the Yamaha Motif XS. To use this sound library, you must have at least 256 MB of RAM (DIMMS) installed in your Motif XS. 512 MB is recommended. Your Motif XS did not ship with any DIMMS modules, so you must purchase and install these yourself. Refer to page 295 of your Motif XS owner’s manual for more information on installing DIMMS modules. “MO SKOOL 2 V2” includes 128 voices, 32 new user drumkits, and 29 pattern templates with pre-sliced audio grooves that can be played at any tempo. Urban grooves and beats, sounds, and FX are included, for rap, hip-hop, r&b, techno, dance, chillout, glitch, electronica – any style of music that calls for cutting edge rhythmic textures and sounds. “MO SKOOL 2 V2” is a huge step up from the original “MO SKOOL” library developed by DCP Productions for the Yamaha Motif Classic and Motif ES synthesizers. Featuring over 111 MB of new samples (the original Mo Skool included only 4 MB) , MO SKOOL 2 goes where no other sound library for the Motif synthesizers has gone before. Complete mixed and mastered audio beats are now available in VOICE mode, for “one-touch” playback. No knowledge of beat-making is required – just press a key, and a beat or groove starts. Furthermore, these audio beats have been “sliced” and loaded to pattern templates, so you can use them at any tempo and build your own tracks around them. Also included are a variety of analog and digital bass sounds, “straight off of vinyl” electric pianos, clavinets, ethnic plucked sounds, acoustic and electric guitars, strings, funky brass and flutes, hits, and construction kits created from the original audio grooves. FX sounds include robot beats and voices, male and female vocalizations, needle drops, scratches and scrapes, gunshots, explosions, breaking glass, helicopters, cell phone ringtones, orchestral samples, rewind/fast forward sounds, reverse drum loops, and more.
HOW TO LOAD THE SOUNDS
WARNING – BACK UP YOUR DATA FIRST
BEFORE YOU LOAD “MO SKOOL 2”, MAKE SURE YOU HAVE BACKED UP (SAVED) ANY DATA IN YOUR PRODUCT THAT YOU MAY WANT TO KEEP. YOU CAN SAVE YOUR DATA IN A VARIETY OF FORMATS ONTO A USB STORAGE DEVICE, OR AS AN EDITOR FILE VIA USB. CONSULT YOUR PRODUCT’S OWNER MANUAL FOR DETAILS ON SAVING/BACKING UP YOUR IMPORTANT DATA SUCH AS SOUNDS, BEATS, SEQUENCES OR SONGS.
FROM THE DOWNLOADED ZIP FILE TO USB DEVICE (JUMP DRIVE or FLASH DRIVE) -
1. Insert your USB device into your computer’s available USB slot. It’s icon
should appear on your desktop. 2. If it isn’t already open, navigate to the “MO SKOOL 2 V2” folder and
double-click on it to open it. 3. Navigate to the folder called “MO SKOOL 2 V2 ALL File” and double-click
to open it. 4. Copy the file called “Mo Skool 2 V2.X0A” to your USB device’s icon (by
either dragging the file directly to the icon, or going to your file menu and choosing “Copy” and “To” and selecting the USB device as your destination).
5. When the file has copied completely to your USB device, properly eject the USB device and insert it in the slot labeled “TO DEVICE” on the rear panel of your Motif XS. You will see a screen message that says “Connecting to USB device…”.
6. Press the FILE button on the front panel of the Motif XS. Use the cursor
buttons to move up to the top of the screen so that the “Device” field is highlighted and turns blue-green. If necessary, turn your jog wheel to the right until you see the name of your USB device in the field. This will indicate that your USB device has been selected.
7. Using the cursor buttons, cursor down to the field marked “Type” and make sure it is set to “all”.
8. Press the cursor up button one more time, then use the INC/YES button to select the file name “Mo Skool 2 V2.X0A.” The name should highlight in blue-green.
9. Press SF2 “LOAD” button. The “Mo Skool 2 V2” library will load 128 voices to USER BANK 3, 32 drum kits to the USER DR bank, and 29 pattern templates which can be called up in PATTERN mode.
10. Press the VOICE button, then USER 3 button, then button A1 to begin. NOTE: When you power off your Motif XS, the samples loaded will be lost. You will have to re-load “Mo Skool 2 V2.X0A” when you power up your Motif XS again. It is highly recommended that you load MO SKOOL 2 V2 as an “ALL” type file each time you power on your Motif XS. Many voices share the same sample data, so loading in voices one at a time can load the same samples multiple times, resulting in a “SAMPLE MEMORY FULL!” error message.
FROM THE DOWNLOADED ZIP FILE TO USB CD DRIVE:
1. Connect a USB CD-ROM drive to your Motif XS’ “To Device” slot located on the rear panel of the Motif XS. Power up the drive. You will see a message in the XS display that reads “Connecting to USB device…”.
2. Insert a blank CD in your computer’s CD drive. Its icon should appear on your desktop..
3. Navigate to the folder called “MO SKOOL 2 V2 ALL File” and double-click to open it.
4. Copy the file called “Mo Skool 2 V2.X0A” to the CD (by either dragging the file directly to the icon, or going to your file menu and choosing “Copy” and “To” and selecting the CD as your destination).
5. When the file has copied completely to your CD, rename the CD to something you want (like “Motif XS stuff”), execute the CD burning procedure, and when that’s completed, properly eject the CD and insert it in the CD-ROM drive connected to your Motif XS.
6. Press the FILE button on the front panel of the Motif XS. Use the cursor buttons to move up to the top of the screen so that the “Device” field is highlighted and turns blue-green. If necessary, turn your jog wheel to the right until you see the name of your CD in the field. This will indicate that your CD has been selected.
7. Using the cursor buttons, cursor down to the field marked “Type” and make sure it is set to “all”.
8. Press the cursor up button one more time, then use the INC/YES button to select the file name “Mo Skool 2 V2.X0A.” The name should highlight in blue-green.
9. Press SF2 “LOAD” button. The “Mo Skool 2 V2” library will load 128 voices to USER BANK 3, 32 drum kits to the USER DR bank, and 29 pattern templates which can be called up in PATTERN mode.
10. Press the VOICE button, then USER 3 button, then button A1 to begin. NOTE: When you power off your Motif XS, the samples loaded will be lost. You will have to re-load “Mo Skool 2 V2.X0A” when you power up your Motif XS again. It is highly recommended that you load MO SKOOL 2 V2 as an “ALL” type file each time you power on your Motif XS. Many voices share the same sample data, so loading in voices one at a time can load the same samples multiple times, resulting in a “SAMPLE MEMORY FULL!” error message.
HOW TO USE MO SKOOLHOW TO USE MO SKOOL
NOTES ABOUT THE SAMPLED AUDIO BEAT VOICES –
READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY:
The first 64 voices in “MO SKOOL 2 V2” are primarily “instant beat” voices which utilize complete sampled audio beats. In VOICE mode, you cannot adjust the tempo of the audio beats without changing the pitch – the tempo is fixed. If you change the pitch (using the pitch bend wheel or knob or other controller), the tempo of the beat will of course change, but it cannot be locked to either the Motif XS’ internal clock, or to external MIDI sync. If you want to match the tempo of an audio beat in VOICE mode to the tempo of your sequence, you will have to “guesstimate” and “fine-tune” the pitch up and down until it sounds close.
Each voice that uses a sampled audio beat DOES have a specific tempo, however – so if you do not adjust the pitch of the voice, you can simply “play it” on the beat with your sequence metronome, quantize it to the appropriate value (whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, eighth notes, or sixteenths) and the beat will play back in perfect time with your sequence. So how do you know what the “original” tempo for each sampled audio beat voice is? Fortunately, we’ve done that work for you already. Simply select the voice, then press the SELECTED PART CONTROL button on the XS front panel until the third row LED is lit. You can see the tempo listed in the display, beneath the TEMPO KNOB icon. Alternately, you can do this:
1. Select a voice. 2. Press EDIT, then COMMON/EDIT, and then F2. 3. The tempo is listed in the upper right hand portion of the
display. You can also find the tempo for voices listed, where applicable, in this manual. PLEASE REMEMBER THAT CHANGING THE TEMPO KNOB WILL NOT CHANGE THE TEMPO OF AN AUDIO BEAT IN VOICE MODE. UNLESS NOTED IN THE VOICE DESCRIPTION. Audio beats in PATTERN mode CAN be adjusted to any tempo, as they have been “pre-sliced” and prepared for that. Please see the section of this manual titled “PATTERN DESCRIPTIONS” for more information on the pattern templates and “pre-sliced” audio beats.
RECORDING BEATS INTO A COMPUTER AUDIO
PROGRAM
If you use a computer audio recording program - digital audio workstation (DAW) such as Pro Tools, Cubase, Sonar, Logic, Digital Performer, Cakewalk, Traktion, or Ableton Live, then you can easily record any MO SKOOL 2 audio beat Voice onto an audio track and then adjust the beat to your project tempo. Different DAW’s have different processes for doing this – for example, in Pro Tools, the “Elastic Time” process will adjust the beat to the project tempo, while in Cubase, the process is called “Vari Audio”, and in Logic it is called “FlexTime”.
AND ABOUT CONTROLLERS –
All of the “MO SKOOL 2 V2” voices are designed so that something happens when you move/play one of the following controllers (some controllers may be unassigned in certain voices): Assignable Knob 1 Assignable Knob 2 Assignable Function Switch 1 Assignable Function Switch 2 Pitch Bend Wheel Mod Wheel Ribbon Try using any of these controllers while playing - you'll see that the creative possibilities really expand when you do. Plus, the "fun factor" increases as well!
VOICE DESCRIPTIONSVOICE DESCRIPTIONS
A1 thru D16 – Audio beats and grooves.
A1 - Sounds of the 70’s “70’s Hit Collection” CD sample. Polyester pants and platform shoes vibe. Play hard for CD skip effects. Tempo – 91 bpm.
A2 – Supercharger
“U.K. dance club” groove - layered audio beats and dance synth lead sound.. Tempo – 137 bpm.
A3 – LiNkEn’ nAiLs Industrial groove and sound in the metal/hard rock/rap rock vein, a la bands like Linkin Park and Nine Inch Nails. Layered audio beats and dusky, grainy melodic synth timbre. Tempo – 88 bpm.
A4 – Floorpumper Heavy techno dance audio beat and vocal effects. Tempo – 120 bpm.
A5 – Beat Alert “Fractured” electro-hop audio beat and grainy metallic synth. Tempo – 78 bpm.
A6 – Rockin’ Tunisia
Layered audio beats and melodic with that “distant ethnic lands” or “casbah” vibe. Tempo – 108 bpm.
A7 – Vocal Scratcher “Boys” group shout vocal sample with turntable “effects” triggered by harder velocities. Use the SF1 thru SF5 buttons to select different “scratching efx” arps.
A8 – Itz On
Electro-groove beat with filter emphasis controlled by velocity, and vocal effect. 120 bpm.
A9 - Da Funk Man
Funky electric rhythm guitar with a twisted wah-wah effect. Tempo - 122 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO
KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO SETTINGS.
A10 - Shortwave
Electronic “broken circuit” sound, for adding extra sci-fi style “ear candy” to a groove.
A11 - Rap Trumpet
Slightly “twisted” lo-fi trumpet sound, for rap, hip-hop, latin hip-hop and r&b, etc.
A12 – Needle Scrapes Turntable needle scrapes. The classic sound effect used on TV or movies to “interrupt” someone daydreaming and imagining something.
A13 – Vinyl Bumps “Bumpin” layered audio beats, slow West Coast rap style. Tempo – 88 bpm.
A14 – Bodayshus Grainy lo-fi beat and melody needle drop “snippet”. Tempo – 100.
A15 – Krakd Flute
Twisted, lo-fi flute sound, for rap, hip-hop, electronica, ambient, glitch, etc. Playing harder triggers articulation sounds.
A16 – Lifter
Pulsing rap/hip-hop synth sound and lo-fi grainy audio beat. Press Assignable Switch 1 to turn off the beat . Tempo - 123 bpm.
B1 – Lil’ Amp
Another funky rhythm guitar arpeggio sound. Tempo - 107 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO
KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO SETTINGS
B2 – Stakkd Ominous sounding layered synth hit. Great for live show intros.
B3 – Neighborhood Patrol
“Low slung” West Coast rap/hip-hop audio beat . Tempo - 85 bpm.
B4 – Ice Cold
Jumpin’ drive-by “big tire” jeep beat. Tempo – 101 bpm.
B5 - Bouncing Grills Bouncing, bobbing “lo-rider” lifter beat. Temp[o – 121 bpm.
B6 – Chrome Rims VERY low-slung drive-by beat. Layered audio grooves. Tempo - 81 bpm.
B7 – Punch It
Orchestra punch needle drop. Hard velocities produce rapid scratching/arpeggios.
B8 – Loopbak Dark, layered “funky bubba” drumkit beats , a la Andre 2000, the Neptunes, etc. Play hard for stutter effects. Tempo - 100 bpm.
B9 - Missy’s Back
90’s style, swaying “Missy Elliot” beat with electro-synth claps. Tempo – 90 bpm.
B10 – 4 Real
Layer of down-tempo gangsta beats and snaky, grainy synths and noises. Tempo – 90 bpm.
B11 – Quik Cutt
Lurching “cut-up” layered groove and synth triangle efx sound. Tempo – 104 bpm.
B12 - Slow-Mo
Slow drive-by “synthetic” sounding beat with sound fx. Tempo – 90 bpm.
B13 - Remixer
Electro-chill-pop beats and sound with “remix” effects on harder velocities. Tempo – 91 bpm.
B14 – Da Hood Boyz
Steady-state gangsta beat with vocal shout-outs. Tempo - 104 bpm.
B15 – Klassikal Intro Complete “classical orchestra intro” sample – for album track and live show openers/intros.
B16 – Organ-omik
60’s-era organ and layered wah-wah beats (think the Doors or Austin Powers). Snaky, gangsta rap/low-slung hip-hop feel. Tempo – 108 bpm.
C1 – MarchingBand A-go-go
Faster-paced “latin” dance club rhythm meets marching band vibe. Tempo - 128 bpm.
C2 - Vinylins
Hip-hop fiddler and kick drum beats..Tempo – 96 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS
VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO
SETTINGS
C3 – Platinum Plus
Party beat with male vocal shout-outs and scratch fx Tempo - 111bpm.
C4 - Techno Hop Electro-techno-hip hop beat with electronic noise efx. Tempo – 120bpm.
C5 – Snake Charmer Ethnic drum and flute groove. Tempo – 101 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS
VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO
SETTINGS
C6 – Sushi
Japanese gangsta/hip-hop groove – synthesized koto textures layered with kicks and high-pitched percussion. Tempo – 109 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS
VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO
SETTINGS
C7 - Roll Reversal Reversed audio beat layered with vocal efx. Tempo – 91 bpm.
C8 - Club Dub Big boomy kick hits, claps, metal chink, with pitch-transposed vocalizations. Harder velocities trigger stutter efx. Tempo – 94 bpm.
C9 – Krakd Brass
Lo-fi modulated brass section sound.
C10 – Tango Hit Panning orchestra hit bursts. Tempo – 100 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS
VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO
SETTINGS
C11 – Lowered
Bouncing subwoofer beat. Tempo – 91 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF THIS VOICE
CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB OR EDITED TEMPO
SETTINGS
C12 – Blip-Blop
Mid-tempo electro groove that plays forward and then reverses the order of beats, layered with robot voice effect. Tempo – 105 BPM
C13 – Bollywood
“Calcutta disco” dance beat with sitar fx sounds. Tempo – 138 bpm.
C14 - Krakd Strings
Lo-fi string section melodic arpeggios. Tempo - 110 bpm. NOTE: TEMPO OF
THIS VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB OR EDITED
TEMPO SETTINGS
C15 – Wackmo Undulating, metallic dance-rock beat with radio broadcast sound effects. Tempo – 101 BPM.
C16 – Daggle
Lo-fi “speakerphone” hip-hop lead sound with glitchy down-tempo acid jazz beat. Tempo – 81 BPM
D1 – Fyoocha Gangsta
Synthetic robot-beat, claps, noises, and rap vocalizations. Tempo – 90 bpm.
D2 - Moroccan Disco
Another “ethnic disco” or “casbah” audio beat layered with ethnic melodic tones. Tempo - 137 bpm.
D3 – Party Like It’s 1599
“Elizabethan” or “Old European” flute and rhythms. Tempo - 95 bpm. NOTE:
TEMPO OF THIS VOICE CAN BE CONTROLLED WITH THE TEMPO KNOB
OR EDITED TEMPO SETTINGS
D4 – Stay High Punchy party beat with vocal “gotta stay high”shout-outs. Tempo - 143 bpm.
D5 – Funky NYC
“New York City” street corner vibe – funky lo-fi “battery-powered amp”guitar licks, beatbox rhythms and vocal shout-outs. Tempo - 94 bpm.
D6 – Robot Beat 1 Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 100 bpm.
D7 – Robot Beat 2
Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 138 bpm.
D8 – Robot Beat 3. Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 128 bpm..
D9 – Robot Beat 4
Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 108 bpm.
D10 – Robot Beat 5
Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 138 bpm.
D11 – Robot Beat 6
Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 90 bpm.
D12 – Robot Beat 7
Synthetic “vocoder” style “robot beat. Tempo – 106 bpm..
D13 – Smoove Break
4-bar club breakbeat with vocalization efx. Tempo – 126 bpm.
D14 – X-Files of Rap Snaky, “off-kilter” rap beat with stuttered metallic sound efx and rap vocalization. Tempo - 126 bpm.
D15 – Metro Phone Call
Electro-hop/chillout groove with and backwards “phone-call” vocal efx. Tempo – 132 bpm.
D16 – Nu Joint Bumping club beat with squeeze sound fx. Tempo – 110 bpm.
E1 thru E16 – Bass sounds.
E1 - $olid
Warm, smooth hybrid synth/electric bass tone.
E2 - Droner
Darker, chorused “drone” bass synth.
E3 - Dark Square
Dark, warm “squarewave” bass sound with chorusing.
E4 - Rounded Round, dark synth bass with “wow”-shaped filter envelope
E5 – Octave Bass
Smooth Minimoog synth bass sound with oscillators set an octave apart.
E6 – FM Bass
Punchy FM synth bass with metallic transients.
E7 – Mini Punch
Detuned, resonant Minimoog bass.
E8 – Roto Rooter Filtered, modulated square-wave bass synth.
E9 - Super Snoop Classic buzzy, resonant “Snoop Dogg” bass sound.
E10 - SH101 Saw
Vintage Roland SH-101 single-oscillator bass.
E11 – Mo Sub
Super-deep, chorused “sub” bass.
E12 – Mini Owng Very resonant Minimoog bass synth with pronounced “Bell” filter envelope. From DCP productions “Pulse” bass library.
E13 - Dark Percussive Variation Minimoog bass sound – muted and darker. From DCP productions “Pulse” bass library.
E14 - Korrused Heavily chorused modular analog synth bass.
E15 - Drop Wax
Filtered analog synth bass with lo-fi background noise.
E16 – Skwadge Resonant analog synth bass with “pinched” or slightly nasal timbre. From DCP productions “Pulse” bass library.
F1 thru F16 – Keyboard sounds – plucked
instruments.
F1 – Radio Roadz
"Off the vinyl" vintage Rhodes electric piano.
F2 - Sunshine
Vintage “retro” Rhodes with panning effects – a la the Rhodes sound in Stevie Wonder’s song, ‘You Are the Sunshine of My Life”. From the DCP Productions “Vintage Keys” library.
F3 – Phazr Roadz
Phased vintage Rhodes piano.
F4 – Jazzy Rhodez Filtered, retro jazz electric piano sound.
F5 – Wurlitzer 129 Woodie Retro Wurlitzer electric piano. ”. From the DCP Productions “Vintage Keys” library.
F6 - Roadz Dirt "Dirty" vintage Rhodes sound.
F7 – Klavinet
Lo-fi clavinet keyboard.
F8 – Wonderclav
Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” clavinet sound. From the DCP Productions “Vintage Keys” library.
F9 - Harp-C-Kord
Mozart in the recording studio. Knob 2 controls the amount of "room" sound.
F10 – Hip-Hop Shamisen
Shamisen sound, hip-hop style.
F11 – Hip-Hop Harp
Plucked harp, hip-hop style.
F12 – Electric Sitar
Retro electric sitar sound. From the DCP Productions “Axxe” library.
F13 – Hip-Hop Koto
Lo-fi plucked koto sound.
F14 – Wah-Wah Gtr
Wah-wah electric guitar sound. From the DCP Productions “Axxe” library.
F15 – Hyper Nylon Guitar
Super bright acoustic nylon string guitar.
F16 – Hyper Steel Guitar
Super bright acoustic steel guitar.
G1 thru G11 – Lead/solo sounds.
G1 – Gold Thin, resonant monophonic "retro" synth lead sound.
G2 – Helium
That "helium balloon" style synth sound.
G3 – Porta Tri
Retro synth lead sound featuring triangle oscillator wave.
G4 – Silver
Thin retro square-wave synth lead.
G5 - Bubbly 5th
Vintage analog "5th lead synth with brassy resonance.
G6 – Porta Sine
Gliding sine wave synth lead. Try playing Kool and The Gang's "Summer Madness" using this sound.
G7 – Play Toy 1
"Party favor" synth lead sound.
G8 – Metallic Mint Synth
Thinner, metallic, buzzing analog synth sound, Motif XS style.
G9 – Play Toy 2
"Party favor" synth lead sound, variation.
G10 – Play Toy 3
"Party favor" synth lead sound, variation.
G11 – Bit Twister Gtr
Heavily processed, harmonized, overdriven, wah-wah’d electric guitar sound – great for Hendrix-style or rap-rock leads, and party tracks in the Black-Eyed Peas/ Will I Am vein. Hold down the keys to hear the sound twist and evolve.
G11 thru G16 – Keyboard sounds.
G12 - 78 RPM Organ
Sound of an old organ recorded onto really old magnetic tape, passed through dirty tape heads. Play the ribbon for more "tape head flanging" metallic effect sounds.
G13 - Klassik Mellotron
Vintage Mellotron “tape strings” sound.
G14 - Juno-60 Strings Analog strings from the Roland Juno-60 synth, circa 1980’s.
G15 – Rap Orchestra 1
Lo-fi string sound for rap, gangsta and dark hip-hop
G16 - Rap Orchestra 2 Variation of lo-fi string sound for rap, gangsta and dark hip-hop.
H1 thru G16 – Drum/percussion sounds, FX
sounds.
H1 – Construction Kit 1
“Construction” drum kit created from sliced audio drum groove. Various drum and percussion elements distributed across the keyboard.
H2 – Construction Kit 2
Variation construction kit.
H3 – Construction Kit 3
Variation construction kit.
H4 – Construction Kit 4 Variation construction kit.
H5 – Construction Kit 5 Variation construction kit.
H6 - Reverse grooves A collection of reversed audio drum grooves.
H7 – Street Scene Gritty city street scene – traffic noise, young girl talking, lowered Chevy drive-by, car stereo with big subwoofers.
H8 – Urban Warfare FX
Gun clip load sound, sirens, Uzi automatic, 32 caliber single gun shots, glass breaking, helicopters.
H9 – Turntable FX
Various needle drops and turntable scratching effects.
H10 – Phone Call FX
Phone keypad sounds, phone ringing, off-the-hook signal.
H11 – Ringtones
Various cell phone alerts/ringtones.
H12 – Boys On The Mike 1
Collection of male vocal shout-outs and phrases.
H13 – Boys On The Mike 2
Collection of male vocal shout-outs and phrases.
H14 - Girls On The Mike Collection of female vocalizations.
H15 - Robot Voices
“Vocoded” or “robot” vocals effects.
H16 - Rewind / FastForward Sound of “scrubbed” audio (tape or in a computer recorder) in rewind or fast forward.
DRUMKIT LISTDRUMKIT LIST
There are 32 new drumkits for you to use in the USER DR bank. Press the USER DR/MUSICAL FX button, then select A1. The drumkits are:
A1 - Beat Box 1 A2 - Tite Kit A3 – Rap Rock Kit 1 A4 – Gangsta Kit 1 A5 – TR-909 Kit 1 A6 - Girl Tek A7 – Hip Hop FX 1 A8 - Tiny Kit 1 A9 – Gangsta Kit 2 A10 – Beat Box 2 A11 – Electro Hop Kit 1 A12 - Soft Kit 1 A13 - Soft Kit 2 A14 - Soft Kit 3 A15 – Oberheim DX Kit 1 A16 – Oberheim DX Kit 2 B1 – Beat Box 3 B2 - Hip Hop FX 2 B3 - Reverse FX Kit B4 - TR-808 Kit 1 B5 - TR-808 Kit 2 B6 – TR-909 Kit 2 B7 – TR-909 Kit 3
B8 – Electro Hop Kit 2 B9 – X-cerpt Kit B10 – Tiny Kit 2 B11 – Rap Rock Kit 2 B12 - Overblown Kit B13 – DownLow Kit B14 – Thudd Kit B15 – Hip Hop FX 3 B16 – Kiks & Snarez
PATTERN MODE CONTENTSPATTERN MODE CONTENTS
There are 29 Pattern Mixes, each containing a “sliced” audio beat on track 1, plus 2 to 5 additional MIDI “voice” track assignments. You can easily assign more sounds to each of the MIDI tracks in each mix, for a total of 16 tracks maximum (the audio beat on track 1, plus 15 additional MIDI tracks). The tempo for any pattern can be freely adjusted, in real time, and the audio beat will automatically follow your changes. This is different from the way it is in VOICE mode. All of the MIDI track assignments in a Pattern Mix can be changed – the ones set up for each pattern are simply “guideline” or “suggestions” that compliment the audio beats – a bass sound, a keyboard sound, a lead sound, an fx sound, string sound, and so on. Feel free to change each Pattern Mix as you want – pattern name, track volumes, panning, voice assignments, effects routings, sends, etc. You can further edit each of the sounds assigned to the MIDI tracks, and store these edited voices as “Mix voices” assigned to the Pattern Mix.
Be sure to STORE any changes you make to each pattern before proceeding to the next Pattern. For further details on Pattern mode, including recording to a Pattern, editing Pattern Mixes and saving your changes, refer to the section of your Motif XS Owner’s Manual which starts on pg. 208. Specific information on Pattern Mix starts on pg. 231 of the Motif XS Owner’s Manual. Additional (and extremely detailed) information on using Pattern mode can be found on the Motif XS DVD, available for sale from http://www.motifator.com/. NOTE: As with the rest of MO SKOOL 2, Pattern Mixes will be lost when you power down your Motif XS. You must reload the MO SKOOL 2 “ALL” file when you power up your Motif XS. The name of each pattern corresponds to the name of the original audio beat that was sliced and put into the pattern. To access the Patterns –
1. Press PATTERN button on your Motif XS front panel. 2. Directly beneath “PATTERN” in the display, you should see the
Pattern Number, “01” highlighted in blue-green. 3. To advance to the next Pattern, press the INC/YES button, or turn the
Jog Wheel. 4. To hear playback of the audio beat in a Pattern, press the PLAY
button in the SEQ TRANSPORT section of your front panel. 5. To play the sounds on the of the tracks in the pattern, press one of
the TRK buttons, 1-16.
LIST OF PATTERN MIXES: 01 – BUBBA 02 - ENIGMA 03 – HOODY 04 – JUMP JUMP 05 – KREW ROLLS 06 – CHROME RIMS 07 – GRINDER 08 – ZOOT SUIT
09 – REDUX 10 - YO YO 11 – LURCH 12 – RANCHERO 13 – S.U.V. 14 – BOOMERANG 15 – VOCODER BEAT 1 16 – VOCODER BEAT 2 17 – VOCODER BEAT 3 18 – BLIP BLIP 19 – STUMBLE BUM 20 – NEWSCOOL 21 – EURO-HOP 22 – KA-SCHMACK 23 – TECH FLOOR 24 – BAS STEP 25 – OFF TIME 26 – JAZZ BREAK 27 – 4-FLOOR 28 – SUPERCHARGE 29 – GO BOX