Diva User Guide: Version 1.2 - Howard Scarr 2013
Diva User Guide: Version 1.2 - Howard Scarr 2013
Diva User Guide: Version 1.2 - Howard Scarr 2013
Introduction
loading presets___________________________6
MIDI Programs folder ____________________________6
favourites, junk, reveal ___________________________6
editing __________________________________7
data display ___________________________________7
undo/redo _____________________________________7
GUI size ______________________________________7
knobs ________________________________________7
master volume _________________________________7
modification symbol _____________________________7
Upper Panels
oscillators _______________________________8
TRIPLE VCO __________________________________8
DUAL VCO ___________________________________10
DCO ________________________________________12
DUAL VCO ECO ______________________________13
envelopes ______________________________19
ADS ________________________________________19
ANALOGUE __________________________________19
DIGITAL _____________________________________20
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Lower Panels
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LFOs __________________________________21
effects _________________________________22
chorus ______________________________________22
phaser ______________________________________22
plate (reverb) _________________________________23
delay _______________________________________23
rotary _______________________________________24
main ___________________________________25
tuning _______________________________________25
amplifier & pan ________________________________25
master ______________________________________26
modifications ___________________________27
VCO ________________________________________27
filter ________________________________________27
feedback_____________________________________27
modulation processors __________________________28
scope __________________________________28
trimmers _______________________________29
MIDI Control
30
31
Troubleshooting
35
36
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Introduction
to get the most out of Diva, you will need a powerful computer
Diva is rather demanding in divine mode, but thats the price we pay to hear her wonderful voice in
top form. If your computer stutters while trying out presets, switch the accuracy mode to fast or
even draft. You will soon learn which one your system can handle. Monophonic presets without
voice stacking should be no problem, even on older computers. If your computer is fairly new, try
the multi-threaded option which distributes active voices across multiple CPU cores. You should
generally render tracks to audio in the highest quality to do this, set OfflineAcc to best.
This manual assumes that you know the basics of subtractive synthesis. If you have any queries or
would like to join a lively discussion about Diva and/or other u-he products, feel free to post a
message in our forum.
install / uninstall
Go to the Diva page, grab the appropriate installer, double-click on the downloaded file and follow
further instructions.
Diva is fully functional in demo mode except for an intermittent crackling that disappears as soon
as the product is registered (by right-clicking on the patch name and selecting the first entry).
To uninstall, delete the plugin and all associated files from the following directories (these locations
depend on the paths you chose during installation):
Windows presets
...\VstPlugins\u-he\Diva.data\Presets\Diva\
Windows preferences ...\VstPlugins\u-he\Diva.data\Support\ (*.txt files)
Windows themes
...VstPlugins\u-he\Diva.data\Support\Themes\
Mac presets
Mac presets (User)
Mac preferences
Mac resources
MacHD/Library/Audio/Presets/u-he/Diva/
[you]/Library/Audio/Presets/u-he/Diva/
[you]/Library/Application Support/u-he/com.u-he.Diva... (*.* files)
MacHD/Library/Application Support/u-he/ (Diva/ and Themes/)
online resources
For Diva support and other u-he products, go to the u-he website
For a lively discussion about u-he products, go to our forum at KVR
For video tutorials and more, go to our youtube channel
For thousands of u-he presets (commercial and free), go to the patch library
special thanks
Vadim Zavalishin and Andy Simper for their invaluable input about zero delay feedback filters
Alexander Hacke and Hans Zimmer for lending us some of their analogue synthesizers
The beta-testers and everybody who contributed presets (over 1200 using only the public beta!)
Brian Rzycki for keeping PatchLib up and running
Nathaniel Reeves of http://nkurence.com/ for kindly polishing the Diva logo
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accuracy
Click on the Main button at the bottom of the window. To the right of the Master section are two
selectors called Accuracy and OfflineAcc. In the current version of Diva these are global
parameters i.e. they remain fixed across all presets, per loaded instance:
draft........ CPU-friendly, but FM will sound rough and resonance is primitive i.e. NOT zero delay!
fast......... Fine for older computers and/or when you need more polyphony in acceptable quality
great...... The best compromise between quality and polyphony on high-power computers
divine..... Top-quality zero delay feedback filters... but can your computer can handle it?
OfflineAcc only has two options same or best (i.e. divine in the current version).
Some host applications may have problems rendering to audio at the selected accuracy, but the
better ones include an inform plug-ins of offline rendering status or similar.
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loading presets
Click on the Patches button at the bottom of Divas window. Select folders from the bottom left
panel, then presets from the main area. The root (Local) directory contains a selection of presets
from the subdirectories. A white square next to a folder name means that the folder is collapsed
click the square to expand it!
The folders numbered 1 through 7 contain a bunch of presets sorted according to category.
TEMPLATES contains a bunch of very basic patches you can load whenever you want to start
from scratch while programming your own sounds.
THIRD PARTY contains several banks of presets sorted by sound designer, plus a special subdirectory called TREASURE TROVE open this for hundreds more sounds!
The bottom righthand area of the Patches window contains patch information the sound-designer
has stored with the preset, e.g. what the preset is best for, which controllers are used etc..
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saving presets
Select the folder where you want to put your sounds. The User folder is initially empty, and is
therefore a good place to start although it appears at the very bottom of the list!
Note: In recent versions of the MacOS Finder, the User folder (~/Library/Audio/Presets/u-he/Diva)
is invisible, as is the enclosing Library folder. To make the Library folder visible, start the Utilities /
Terminal application and type (or copy/paste) in the following, followed by ENTER:
chflags nohidden ~/Library
To save, click on the button at the top left. A window opens in which you can give your sound a
name, enter your name (as author) and any details you wish to add: preset description, preset
usage etc.. Then confirm by clicking on the apply button.
Right-click in the folders pane to create a new folder, refresh the list (necessary whenever folders
or presets are added using Finder/Explorer) or highlight the clicked folder in Finder/Explorer.
editing
data display
Primarily, the central display shows the name of the selected patch or the current value of any
element being edited. Clicking on the areas either side of the display steps through patches.
Clicking on the display opens a drop-down list containing all the patches in the current directory.
undo/redo
The two arrow symbols call Divas undo and redo functions, with an unlimited number of steps.
GUI size
Right-click on any blank area in Diva to change the size. Note: At the time of writing, 8 sizes are
available and the only skin is the original. A custom skin editor with a very sophisticated scaling
system (which should also make the labeling much clearer) is in development.
knobs
Values are adjusted via the usual click-and-drag, often allowing finer resolution via the SHIFT
key on your computer. Knobs can be reset to their default values via double-click, and remotecontrolled / automated via right-click (the MidiLearn function).
Tip for wheel-mouse owners: mouseover and roll the wheel to edit values.
master volume
To change the overall level, click on the Main button at the bottom of Divas window and adjust
the large knob in the centre of the Master sub-panel.
modification symbol
Wherever this symbol appears, it means that the neighbouring parameter is being modulated
from within the Modifications panel.
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Upper Panels
While checking out the presets you must have noticed that the main modules can be swapped out.
Simply click on the label at the bottom of each module, then select from the list. You dont have to
click on the grey triangle anywhere on the label will do.
Some smaller labels within each panel also have grey triangles. Click on these labels to replace
default modulation sources. Selected sources other than the default appear as Dymo tape call
us crazy, but we rather like the retro-look of sticky labels on custom-modified hardware!
oscillators
Diva offers 4 different oscillator types: Triple VCO (morphing oscillators with FM, sync and filter
feedback), Dual VCO (multi-wave oscillators with sync, PWM and cross mod), DCO (single twowave oscillator with PWM and flexible sub-osc) and Dual VCO Eco (CPU-friendly, pulse width, ring
modulation). All of these include a noise generator. Some of the parameters, although practically
the same, have different names in different models. Perhaps unnecessary, but more authentic!
Note: the output levels of oscillators can have a significant effect on the tonal quality of the filters.
The Dual VCO and DCO models, neither of which currently include volume controls, might include
these in future versions. Either that, or the filters will include input gain controls (yet to be decided).
TRIPLE VCO
The most complex and CPU-hungry oscillator model, Triple VCO stretches across two panels...
The upper switches on the left activate pitch (tune) modulation for each oscillator. To specify a
modulation source other than the ENV2, click on the label and select from the list.
Example: modulation wheel is controlling oscillator 2 pitch only, as only
the middle switch is active (indicated by the white dot).
TUNE MOD specifies the amount of pitch modulation. This knob is
bipolar i.e. the amount of modulation can be either negative or positive.
You wont hear any modulation if this is set to zero, as shown here!
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Similarly, the lower switches activate waveform (shape) modulation see WAVEFORM below.
To specify a modulation source other than LFO2, click on the label and select from the list...
Example: envelope 2 is modulating the waveforms of oscillators 1 and
2, but not oscillator 3.
SHAPE MOD specifies the amount of waveform modulation. This knob
is also bipolar i.e. the amount of modulation can be negative.
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DUAL VCO
A simpler model than Triple VCO, but with the advantages of independent (split) pitch control as
well as multiple waveforms within each oscillator...
The two sliders to the left control the width of pulse waves. PW sets the nominal width from
very narrow through 50% to 100% (silence). The other adjusts the depth of pulse width
modulation from the selected source (LFO2 by default), with zero in the centre. The switch
below applies these settings to VCO1 only or to both oscillators.
The octave switches (32 to 2) and DETUNE knob (oscillators 2 only) determine oscillator
pitches. Again, DETUNE acts like a 5-turn potentiometer that will also affect the octave range.
The central SYNC button synchronizes VCO2 to VCO1. When switched on, the pitch of VCO2
should be set higher than VCO1 (or at least modulated upwards). Tip: For the maximum sync
sweep range, set VCO1 to 32 and Transpose to 24.
The 4-way switch (1 / BOTH / 2 / SPLIT) specifies pitch modulation targets for a pair of sources
(ENV2 and LFO2 by default). To modulate VCO1 and VCO2 independently, select SPLIT here.
The two vertical rows of buttons select waveforms: Triangle, Saw, Pulse/PWM, Noise (VCO1
only) and Sine (VCO 2 only).
CROSS MOD (cross modulation) is similar to FM 1->2/3 in
the Triple VCO module (see the previous pages). The main
difference here is that the cross-modulation amount can be
modulated directly from within the oscillator panel.
In this example, the amount of cross modulation is being
(positively) controlled by the modulation wheel.
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MIX balances the volumes of VCO1 and VCO2. Note: Because VCO1 includes a noise source,
it made sense to allow MIX to be modulated via Noise & Dual VCO Mix in the Modifications
panel. This means you can use e.g. an envelope or LFO to crossfade between the two VCOs.
SHAPE gives you a choice of three Dual VCO hardware revisions. Although this switch affects
the sound of all waveforms, it is most noticeable with triangles:
Note: These screenshots were made while playing the note C2. Like real analogue oscillators,
however, the shapes of waves in Diva are not 100% the same at all pitches.
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DCO
This is a single oscillator model specializing in complex / bright waveforms with sub-oscillator.
The left half of this panel is the same as the Dual VCO but without the switches that pertain to
VCO2. Without a second oscillator, cross-modulation is not possible, but this lack is tempered
by the DCOs ability to add waveforms together.
The final waveform is the sum of three parts, PULSE, SAWTOOTH and SUBOSCILLATOR,
each of which offers a choice of several different shapes. The result can be quite complex:
In the PULSE and SAWTOOTH selectors, the straight line means silence/off, and the 4th option
from the top (in each case) reacts to pulse width settings:
these two are the only waveforms that react to pulse width settings
The SUB-OSCILLATOR offers six different waveforms, all based on pulse waves. The top four
are all one octave below the main oscillator, the others are two octaves down.
Finally, to the right of the panel are sliders for the SUB and NOISE levels.
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When switched to RING, the regular VCO2 output is replaced by ring modulation between the
selected VCO1 wave and the VCO2 square wave.
Although the two oscillators can be tuned independently, both TUNE MOD sources (ENV2 and
LFO2 by default) are applied to overall pitch.
Because VCO1 includes noise, its volume can be modulated via Noise & Dual VCO Mix in the
Modifications panel.
One more thing: the shape of the triangle wave is rather interesting...
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FEEDBACK
The same as integrated into the TRIPLE VCO oscillator model (see there). The knob controls
the amount of signal taken post-filter and fed back into the mixer. Effects range from mild bass
boost to subharmonics / low-frequency howling.
HPF | POST
Although located to the left of the main filter, this model is actually after the main filter in Divas
signal path. It doesnt affect the tone of the main filter by changing its input levels, but either
boosts the bass (BOOST setting) or removes low frequencies from the (already) filtered signal.
HPF | PRE
A high-pass filter before the main filter, with continuous frequency control. HPF | PRE can affect
the tone of the main filter by sending it fewer low-frequencies to work with. Use this model e.g.
to tame the output of the DCO oscillator, or to thin out a noise source etc..
HPF | BITE
A complete high pass filter before the main filter, with cutoff modulation and resonance control.
Unlike the similar-looking ECO oscillator, this is actually the most CPU-hungry option... so you
can expect some powerful tonal shaping. Note: The resonance control is called PEAK here.
Two REV (revision) models are available, with different characteristics. But be warned either
of them can BITE!
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main filters
This is where a lot of Divas magic happens. The current version offers four main filter models,
each based on a classic hardware filter (or two): Ladder, Cascade, Multimode and Bite...
VCF | LADDER
Classic 24dB per octave ladder filter based on the behaviour of a specific piece of monophonic
hardware (the word on the street is that each unit that left the factory sounded at least slightly
different the one we borrowed is certainly special).
In addition to the original specifications, VCF | LADDER offers bipolar filter-FM from oscillator 1
plus a 12dB per octave (2-pole) option.
Either side of the Cutoff and Emphasis (resonance) controls is a pair of user-definable
modulation sources (ENV 2 and LFO 2 by default) with amount knobs, plus a freely adjustable
key follow control (KYBD).
Note: Emphasis (resonance) and FM amount can be modulated from the Modifications panel.
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VCF | CASCADE
A cleaner sounding filter than Ladder, CASCADE offers a very similar set of controls...
Purely in terms of features, the only difference between the Ladder model and CASCADE is the
ROUGH / CLEAN switch. Apart from altering the overall tonal character, it has a noticeable
effect on the amount of resonance at the top end of its range.
CASCADE is an all-rounder. It is particularly good for big smooth pads without generating too
much grunge when input signal levels are high.
The 12dB per octave switch (click on the LED) effectively removes two of the poles, resulting in
a brighter sound while still retaining the overall character.
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VCF | MULTIMODE
Featuring extra high-pass and band-pass options, the multimode model is based on the filter in
yet another classic polyphonic synthesizer or two...
All controls except the sliding switch should already be familiar, assuming you have read about
the other filter models above.
LP4 is a 4-pole low pass model and LP2 is the 2-pole alternative.
HP is a high-pass (removes low frequencies) and BP a band-pass (removes both high AND low
frequencies i.e. allows only a band of frequencies around the cutoff point to pass through).
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VCF | BITE
Although VCF | BITE seems to have no distinguishing features compared with the other models,
it actually sounds very different...
The tone is highly dependent on input signal levels, the selected revision (REV) and the value of
PEAK i.e. resonance. Like the corresponding high-pass module, the lowpass BITE filter is a real
character, able to deliver anything from solid 2-pole to screaming mayhem.
Tip: If you want to hear a lot of resonance (Peak), try low oscillator volumes! Even as little as
10% can be just right.
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envelopes
The righthand panel comprises two envelopes one above the other, each with its own model
selector. Note that the curves of envelopes within the same hardware synth (i.e. those used for
amplifiers vs those used for filters etc.) often differ. This important but often overlooked detail has
also been carefully modeled in Diva...
ADS
Simplified ADSR with shared decay and release times. The Release stage can be switched off
so that even a long decay will stop as soon as the note is released.
This envelope was modeled on that same specific piece of monophonic hardware mentioned
above, but adapted for polyphonic use.
Tip: Before switching RELEASE on in envelope 1, make sure that DECAY is set to a value
suitable as a release time.
VEL (velocity) determines how much the envelope level is modulated (scaled) by MIDI velocity.
KYBD (keyboard follow) scales the attack, decay and release times according to the MIDI note
number. This makes the envelope of high notes shorter and low notes longer.
ANALOGUE
ADSR type modeled on the envelope of another famous but unnamed analogue synthesizer...
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DIGITAL
Digital ADSR type modeled on a later (and significantly cheaper) successor to the above. The
DIGITAL envelope contains two extra buttons labeled C and Q:
C (curve) affects the overall curvature, giving the envelope more of an S form...
Q (quantize) gives you a slightly steppy sound (think e.g. Alpha Juno, Matrix 1000 envelopes).
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Lower Panels
LFOs
At the bottom left of all windows except Patches, you will see a pair of low frequency oscillators:
LFO 1 is also used as the direct source of vibrato, and LFO 2 is connected by default to several
parameters in Divas other modules (hence the labels in brackets).
The Waveform selector opens a list of all available LFO shapes:
sine
triangle
saw up
saw down
sqr hi-lo : a square wave that starts positive / high when Phase is at minimum
sqr lo-hi : a square wave that starts negative / low when Phase is at minimum
rand hold : a steppy random wave
rand glide : a smooth random wave
The Restart selector has four options specifying when LFOs will be restarted:
sync never restarts LFOs for all notes are in phase unless modulated apart
gate restarts per note at the specified Phase (see below)
single is similar to sync, but restarts at the next note after all notes are released
random restarts at a random phase per note
Phase adjusts where (within its cycle) the LFO waveform will be restarted
Delay fades the LFO in, from immediate to about 20 seconds
Rate offsets LFO speed (negatively or positively) from its nominal value
Rate Mod controls the amount of rate modulation from a source specified in the neighbouring
selector (none in the above image try e.g. ModWheel or KeyFollow here)
Sync is the rate/synchronization mode 3 absolute times plus 24 synchronized to song tempo
Depth Mod controls the amount of LFO level modulation from a source specified in the
neighbouring selector (ModWheel in the above image). Tip: If the source is set to none, you can
use the Depth Mod knob to reduce the LFO level.
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effects
At the bottom right of all windows except Patches you will see a pair of stereo EFFECTS. The
upper selector specifies the kind of effect and the large LED to the left is an on/off switch.
The two effects are arranged in series. This means that you can even set up two reverbs, e.g. one
for the early reflections and the other for the main reverb tail.
chorus
Type Classic, Dramatic, Ensemble are based on real hardware effects. The Ensemble type is
especially rich it can turn a raw VCO into a classic string machine sound.
Rate is the modulation speed. Use low values for slow stereo effects.
Depth is the modulation amount. Set to zero (with Classic or Dramatic) for static colouration.
Wet is dry/wet mix. Subtle Chorus can add stereo width without making the sound too washy.
phaser
Type Stoned or Flanged also based on real hardware effects. The Flanged type is more
resonant, and is particularly interesting when applied to bright sounds.
Feedback is the resonance amount control.
Sync synchronizes the Phasers LFO to song tempo. See Rate below.
Stereo width. Note that with the Stoned type, maximum stereo width is at +/- 25.00 (especially
obvious if you turn Feedback up).
Rate is the modulation speed. If Sync (see above) is on, the value is measured in beats i.e.
quarters, so the rate actually gets slower as values increase. Example: For one cycle every 3
bars in 4/4 time, set this to 12.00 (3 times 4).
Phase controls phase offset, from 0 to 360.
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plate (reverb)
PreDelay is a simple delay before the reverb starts. This is especially useful for retaining the
closeness of the original signal.
Diffusion adds a subtle chaos to the reverb, thus reducing metallic resonances.
Damp causes higher frequencies to fade more quickly than low frequencies. Damping emulates
the warming effect of carpets, curtains, wood etc. in a room.
Decay controls the time it takes for the reverb to fade out
Size ranges from tiny bathroom to huge cathedral. Tip: It is well worth experimenting with all
combinations of Decay and Size!
Dry / Wet are level controls for the untreated and effect signals.
delay
Left / Center / Right delay times across the stereo field, always relative to host tempo (BPM).
Integer values are exact semiquavers (quarter-beats), and Center defines the Feedback time.
This configuration is unusual it lets you set a repeat rate without hearing that particular
tap (simply turn down Center Vol to zero).
Dry is the level of the unprocessed signal.
Center Vol / Side Vol are separate levels controls for the center tap and the stereo (L/R) taps.
Wow emulates slow tape wobble, ranging from subtle/spacey to almost seasick.
Feedback is the regeneration amount. 100.00 will give you an infinite loop if HP is set to
minimum and LP to maximum... well worth trying out!
HP / LP are cutoff controls for highpass and lowpass filters within the feedback path. Decrease
LP for typical damping, increase HP to reduce the bass and mid frequencies.
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rotary
A realistic rotary cabinet i.e. Leslie emulation, with tube-like distortion.
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main
Selecting the Main button opens a set of three panels: TUNING, AMPLIFIER and MASTER...
tuning
Vibrato controls the amount that oscillators are pitch-modulated from LFO1 (remember that
LFO levels also depend on the value of Depth Mod)
Glide sets the basic portamento rate, Glide2 is a bipolar offset applied to VCO2 (Dual VCOs
and Triple VCO) as well as VCO3 (Triple VCO)
Range is the portamento strength, a u-he speciality. Lower values shift the beginning of the
slur closer to the target note great for sloppy intonation effects!
GlideMode has two options:
time: however far apart notes are, the glide will take exactly the same amount of time
rate: When notes are further apart, glide is proportionally slower
Fine (fine tune) shifts the pitch over a range of +/- 1 semitone
Transpose shifts the pitch in semitone steps over a range of +/- 24 semitones
Up and Down set the pitch bend ranges, from 0 to 24 semitones
Microtuning: Diva supports standard .tun microtuning. Hundreds of microtuning tables are
available online, most of them free. Put all your .tun files into the following folder:
Win ...\Diva.data\Tunefiles (specifically for Diva)
Mac MacHD/Library/Application Support/u-he/Tunefiles/ (global for all u-he plugins)
After loading a suitable tuning file, switch Microtuning on by clicking on the LED.
VCA selection: either envelope 1 or a simple gate (freeing up Env1 for other purposes!)
Volume is a bipolar gain control. Positive values can subtly overdrive the amplifier
Vol Mod is for gain modulation (via the neighbouring modulation source)
Pan (panorama) shifts the voice(s) towards the left or right channel
Pan Mod modulates pan position. E.g. to pan stacked voices apart, use StackIndex
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master
This is perhaps the most important panel in Diva. Accuracy (for saving or squandering CPU
power), voice polyphony and voice stacking, mono/poly modes, master output. Not forgetting
the automation-capable LED colour knob!
Voices sets the maximum number (2-12) of playable voices before note-stealing occurs. Mostly
used to guard against audio glitches while running CPU-intensive patches. See also Accuracy
and multi-threading below.
Voice Stack sets the number of unison voices. Use the StackIndex modulation source and/or
stacked voice tuning to offset stacked voices against each other.
Mode has five options...
Poly: standard polyphonic operation
Mono: monophonic, each new note triggers the envelopes
Legato: monophonic, doesnt retrigger until a space is left between consecutive notes
Duo: duophonic, max. 2 notes, oscillator 2 follows the highest note (Note Priority is ignored)
Poly2: a variant of Poly in which notes in their release stage are stolen before new voices
Note Priority only applies to Mono and Legato modes. The options are...
last: the most recent note is played (later, digitally controlled synthesizers)
lowest: the lowest note (earliest and possibly best, most classic USA mono-synths)
highest: the highest note (EMS plus most classic Japanese mono-synths)
Output sets the final volume for a patch. As this control has no effect whatsoever on the tone,
use Output in preference to amp Volume to balance levels between patches.
LED Colour determines the colour of all indicator lights in Diva. Automatable...
Accuracy is a VERY important global parameter, as it trades CPU-hit for realtime audio quality
(especially resonance). See page 3 for details.
Offline Acc is the accuracy used for offline audio rendering, and is also a global parameter
multi-threaded causes Diva to distribute voices across multiple cores, which will usually allow
more voices to be played simultaneously without overloading the CPU. To activate this feature,
click on the LED.
Multi-threading works well on recent processors such as Intel i5 and i7, but please note that
performance can even be reduced if your CPU is older. Also, this feature might interact with
multi-threaded hosts in an unpredictable fashion (we havent observed such problems so far).
Important: This option is not an adequate replacement for freezing tracks etc., its main purpose
is to let users play as many voices as possible on a single instance of Diva. If your project
includes several instances, make sure that as many as possible are not multi-threaded certain
combinations of hosts, drivers etc. are succeptible to drop outs / stalls when several instances
are multi-threaded!
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modifications
Many synthusiasts enjoy experimenting with the more esoteric features of a synthesizer. Diva
doesnt disappoint click on the Modifications button to open the following panel:
The upper half includes options that arent available in the main panels e.g. resonance modulation,
plus a few that are only available in certain modules. The lower half contains a bunch of simple
modulation processors with input selectors see below for details.
VCO
FM & Cross Mod Depth lets you modulate the FM amount in the TRIPLE VCO (and perhaps
future oscillator models) from the selected modulation source. Note that this feature mirrors the
extra Cross Mod parameters in the DUAL OSC model.
Noise & Dual VCO Mix lets you modulate the level of Noise (or the oscillator also responsible
for noise) in all oscillator models, from the selected modulation source. For the Triple VCO and
DCO models, this is easy because the noise generator is a separate audio source in both
cases. In Dual VCO and Eco models, however, it modulates VCO1 level because noise is an
integral part of VCO1. In the Dual VCO (not Eco) model, it does this by negatively modulating
Mix great for cross-fading between the two oscillators.
filter
Resonance Mod lets you modulate the Resonance / Emphasis / Peak parameter from the
selected modulation source. There is no equivalent within the main oscillator panels.
Filter FM Mod lets you modulate the amount of filter FM (OSC1) from the selected modulation
source.
feedback
Feedback Mod lets you modulate the amount of Feedback from the selected modulation
source. This only applies if the oscillator model is Triple VCO, or Feedback is selected as the
central module.
modification symbol
This is not a button or knob, but simply a reminder that wherever the (M) symbol appears in
other panels, the neighbouring parameter is currently being modulated in this panel.
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modulation processors
rectify converts all negative values in a modulation source to positive values
invert turns a modulation source upside-down, negative becomes positive and vice versa
quantize creates discrete steps the value is a division factor: the lowest value 2.00 means
two steps if the input is unipolar (e.g. envelope), and four steps if it is bipolar (e.g. LFO)
lag slows down abrupt changes in the source e.g. makes square waves more rounded
multiply outputs the product of two modulation sources
add outputs the sum of the modulation sources
There are several practical examples of how to use these functions in Tips and Tricks.
scope
Every synth needs an oscilloscope...
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trimmers
This panel is the most esoteric part of Diva. As well as letting you detune voices (individual and/or
stacked), a variable degree of slop can be applied to cutoff frequency, envelope times, pulse width
and glide times. By popular demand, individual oscillators can now be reset to a definable phase...
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MIDI Control
MidiLearn and MidiUnLearn
Diva can be remote-controlled / automated via MIDI messages from a hardware controller unit
or from your sequencer program. Right-click any knob to open a menu containing MidiLearn
and MidiUnLearn.
Important: Still undergoing a major redesign, the extra functionality described below should be
considered beta.
If you ever have problems with parameters magically resetting themselves, the usual reason is
an accidental MIDI learn. Find the offending control, right-click and MidiUnLearn it.
MIDI controllers
Divas extended MidiLearn function lets you define how any parameter will react to MIDI CC
(continuous controller) messages. Before you use MidiLearn, right-click on the data display and
select the MIDI Controllers entry from the top of the list. The options are...
none
normal
integer
fine
octaves
semitone
fineSelected
The seven page options are not implemented yet, and should be ignored for now.
The last four options are used to specify the kind of harware you are using. If in doubt, set this
to the default Continuous 7bit.
Encoder 127
Encoder 64
Continuous 7bit
Continuous 14bit
unipolar encoders
bipolar encoders
7-bit MIDI CC (standard default)
14-bit MIDI CC
Note: MIDI remote control is channel sensitive. You can map up to 16 channels of any CC you
like except Modulation Wheel, Bank Select, Hold or All Notes Off, for a grand total of over 1,900
mappable controllers!
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programming 101
1. Click on the Patches button at the bottom of the window, select the TEMPLATES folder and load
the preset called INIT June-60. Now click on the Scope button this opens the main edit panel
AND Divas oscilloscope.
2. Play a fairly low note (you do have a MIDI keyboard attached, right?). The shape you can see in
Divas oscilloscope is moving in time with the tone of what you are hearing...
3. Find the Transpose knob in the lefthand (DCO) panel, and change it to 16 (was 8). The
oscillator is now an octave lower (play that keyboard).
4. To the left of the Transpose knob are two sliders. Double-click on the one labelled LFO2. The
value of that slider (which controls pulse width modulation depth) is reset to the centre and the
sound has become static. Move the leftmost slider up and down while playing a low note. Watch
how the shape changes, then leave it at minimum.
5. What you hear (and see) is a 50-50 mixture of 50% PULSE (i.e. square) and SAWTOOTH. Click
on the first SAWTOOTH option (the straight line i.e. silence) to isolate the pulse wave. Try the
different HPF values, then leave it at 0.
6. Double-click on the PW slider (resets it to 50 i.e. 25% pulse) and take the other slider (pulse
width modulation depth from LFO2) up to maximum. Go to the bottom left of the window,
change LFO2s Waveform to saw up and change Sync to 1/4. Keep playing that keyboard!
7. Go to the VCF panel and try the CUTOFF and RESONANCE sliders. Then double-click on both
to reset them. Still in the filter panel, take the second cutoff modulation knob (currently labelled
LFO 2) down to about -30.00. You now have a rhythmic sound that will cycle through the notes
in a chord if you play them at different times. Try adjusting DETUNE...
8. Activate the two effects (Chorus and Delay) at the bottom right of the window by clicking on the
small round buttons (they will light up). If you like, experiment with the effects parameters for a
while, especially the Delay controls. Add some NOISE from the DCO panel!
9. Go back to LFO 2, click on the lower righthand button and select ModWheel (or default). Turn
up the Depth Mod knob to maximum. Now the level of LFO 2 is controlled via the modulation
wheel/stick on your keyboard. Turn Depth Mod down to minimum again so that the modulation
wheel has no effect.
10. Swap the oscillator type: Click on the DCO label and select DUAL VCO. Click both Sawtooth
icons to switch them off, and activate both pulse waves instead. Turn MIX to the centre. Click on
the NO MOD label and select LFO 2 instead. Change the value of that knob to -20. Similarly,
replace the VCF CASCADE with VCF BITE. Experiment with the filter controls until you get a
nicely grungy, resonant pulsating sound (note that REV 2 sounds fuller).
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bite me!
The BITE models are based on relatively cheap but (as I only recently began to realize) very
characterful Japanese hardware perhaps BITE stands for Big In The East?
Lets take a closer look at a preset that uses the BITE highpass filter:
1. Load POLY SYNTH / HS Ecobite Clav and play that sound for a while. Use your pitchbender.
2. One thing you should notice is that the HPF cutoff has glide while the oscillator pitch doesnt.
This is because HPF cutoff is modulated by KYBD2 (keyboard follow 2) with Glide2 set to 32.
3. Go to the Main page and change the HPF to e.g. POST. The sound has lost all its bite so the
main ladder filter has little to do with the character of this patch. Change the HPF back to BITE.
4. You could make this sound honk a bit more by switching the VCF to 12dB mode. Try that...
5. Still not gritty enough? Select Rotary in Effect 1 and switch it on. Set Drive to maximum and turn
the Balance way down.
bass boost
The BITE highpass can also be used to boost bass frequencies see the preset HS Model K12.
Note that most of the bite in that preset does come from the ladder filter (in 12dB mode).
twin effects
Divas two effects are arranged in series, and they offer the same options... which means you
can even use the same type of effect in both slots:
twin reverb
1. Load PERCUSSIVE / MK FX Zapper (if it works with sharp percussion, it works with anything!)
2. Turn Effect 2 Wet up to 50 and Decay to minimum. Compare by switching Effect 2 off and on.
Try adjusting the Size parameter slightly, but leave it somewhere between 15 and 35.
3. Select Plate in Effect 1 and switch it on. Take Effect 1 Wet to about 15.
Note that the first effect in the signal chain is responsible for the tail and the second is for the
early reflections a richer sound than the more obvious early reflections first, as long as the
tails PreDelay is very fast.
twin rotary
1. Load TEMPLATES / INIT Alpha
2. Take envelope 1 Sustain to zero and adjust the
decay until you get your preferred organ-type
click (even 0 works). Turn Sustain back up to 50
and Release to zero.
3. Set up the effects to look exactly like this image:
Effect 1 is responsible for removing some high
frequencies (via Balance) as well as for the
strong distortion (via Drive). Effect 2 is a typical
stereo Rotary push your modulation wheel up
while performing.
This patch can be greatly improved by applying
vibrato, using different waves, adding SUB etc..
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Troubleshooting
Diva has proved herself to be very stable you shouldnt have any problems running her in any
of the popular host applications as long as your system is powerful enough!
CPU overload?
Diva is very demanding, especially in divine mode. You will need quite a powerful computer. If
your system only delivers one or two voices before the CPU starts complaining, there are still a
few things you can do without upgrading your hardware:
1. Lower the Accuracy setting (in the Main/Master panel)
2. Lower the polyphony and/or switch the Mode (Main/Master) to Poly2, then resave the preset.
3. If you have e.g. a quad-core computer, try activating the multi-threaded option (Main/Master).
Multi-threaded is not an adequate replacement for freezing tracks etc., its main purpose is to
let users play one instance of Diva with as many voices as possible. If a project consists of
many instances of Diva, please check that as few as possible are multi-threaded. In certain
combinations of hosts, drivers etc., multi-threaded can even cause drop outs and stalls.
4. Use Diva as a purely monophonic synth! Many classics were only monophonic...
out of tune?
First of all, you have good ears! Diva emulates classic analogue hardware, and many of the
presets (including some of the template files) have been programmed to sound very similar to
wobbly old synthesizers. Some people actually like that...
However, the amount of slop is optional: Go to the Trimmers page and turn down Max Detune
as well as Drift before saving a sound. Then read all about the Trimmers.
other problems?
If youre really stuck, you should make use of our support page.
You could also help us improve Diva by sending us a log file. To set this up, create a new text
file and save it immediately as Diva to your desktop. Rename the file to Diva.log. Once the
problem occurs, quit your host app and send a copy of Diva.log to [email protected] together
with a short explanation of the problem. Please also state your operating system and host
application. Thanks in advance!
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Breath
breath controller, MIDI CC #02
Env1
Env2
Expression
Gate
KeyFollow
KeyFollow2
LFO1
LFO2
ModWheel
PitchWheel
Pressure
Velocity
MIDI velocity
Add
adds two mod sources together
Alternate
Invert
Lag
slows down changes in the mod source, makes e.g. square waves rounded
Multiply
Quantize
creates discrete steps the value is a division factor (try 2.00, 4.00, 8.00...)
Random
Rectify
StackIndex
voice number use for e.g. Pan. For detuning, use the stacked voice tuners
note: values created by StackIndex are evenly spread between +1 and -1
VoiceMap
the 8 general-purpose offsets defined at the bottom of the Trimmers panel
none
nothing!
The End
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