Novation shows with the Bass Station II Synthesizer, that they also give old products new shine with amazing updates. Today, they continue here and released one more major firmware update for the BSII. The highlight of the new update is the AFX Mode, a collaboration with Aphex Twin. It allows you to create for each note a new sound (preset) or subtle parameter change.
So you can have on the left side a sound with a very small filter portion, on the other side a complete open filter. The sound design possibilities are endless here. With the built-in arpeggiator, you can even build super complex rhythmic sounds using the different sounds on the keys. Beside this, it comes now with new features for the envelopes (fixed duration & retrigger count), more controls over the sub-oscillator as well as expanded oscillator glide functionality. In my opinion, another impressive update for the Bass Station II.
The latest firmware update for Bass Station II adds five powerful and innovative new features to Novation’s hugely popular mono synth, all of them developed in response to user feedback and requests, one of those users being particularly noteworthy…
AFX Mode
Electronic music legend Richard James, aka Aphex Twin, has already played an instrumental part in the Bass Station II story, having provided guidance for the implementation of the micro-tuning added with Firmware v2.5. His conceptual contribution to v4.14 is even more profound, however.
Letting his imagination run riot, Richard envisioned the decidedly radical notion of having a discrete set of synthesis parameters assigned to each note of Bass Station II, either variations on a ‘seed’ patch, or disparate sounds designed to constitute a chimeric whole. Although this sort of thing could already be kludged using very fast program change messages, having multiple sounds active at the same time would clearly be a far more creative and efficient system.
AFX Mode is the realisation of James’ out-there concept. Put simply, it lets you modify your Bass Station II patch on a key-by-key basis. Use it to introduce subtle changes to a sound as you play up and down the keyboard; divide the keyboard into multiple zones (one per key if you like!), each playing its own sound; or create entire drum kits in a single preset for triggering manually or via the Arpeggiator. It’s a truly inspiring feature that really does open up a whole new world of sound design and performance possibilities.
Fixed duration envelopes
Aiding in the programming of drum sounds and plucks especially, the sustain segments of Bass Station II’s envelopes can now be set to a fixed length, moving on to the release stage regardless of when the key or trigger is actually released after playing a note. When fixed duration envelopes are enabled, the decay stage is taken out of play, and the Decay slider instead sets the duration of the Sustain stage.
Extended sub-oscillator control
With Firmware v4.14, Bass Station II’s sub-oscillator, slaved to the pitch of Oscillator 1, can be detuned using the Coarse and Fine controls. Now you can set the sub to any non-octave tracking interval you like, and knock it out of tune – subtly or dramatically – for creative effect.
Oscillator glide diverge
Prior to Firmware v4.14, both of Bass Station II’s oscillators could only be set to the same Glide time, but now you can slow down the Glide time of Oscillator 2 relative to Oscillator 1 by a variable amount, causing the two to diverge for interesting portamento effects. Just the thing for adding thickness and character to basslines, pads and leads, and certainly not a function you’ll find on many other hardware or software synths.
Envelope retrigger count
The Firmware v2.5 update added envelope retriggering, and now, to help with drum synthesis, the number of times the envelopes retrigger can be adjusted.
Novation Bass Station II firmware V4.1.4 is a free update for all BSII users and available via the Components content manager for PC & Mac.
More information here: Novation
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