![]() I don’t think you could get anywhere near that on a typical wavetable synth. Wavestate (and Wavestation) does excel at those “one finger” rhythm and evolving pad sounds that it is known for. The sequences can play out per-note or be synced globally. Then many other patches might use the knobs expand the timing lane to include more elaborate steps and make a more complex and interesting rhythm on demand. ![]() Another patch uses velocity to modulate the start position to select between several velocity layers of a piano multisample. Then a knob is routed to the sample lane start position to effectively provide a one-knob “menu” of various bass or pad sounds. On some patches on the Wavestate the timing lane has a step set to “gate” which means it just holds a step until the key is released. On the Wavestate you can modulate the sequence start, end, and loop points for each type of data individually – that is sample selection, timing (rhythm), pitch, a modulation lane, etc. The wave sequencing concept is a bit more rigid there – you just have a playlist of waves. ![]() I think mainly a wavetable (in the PPG/serum type of “table of waves” sense) synth you can modulate the position using various sources and a wave cycle is read from that position.
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