just wondering whats the purpose or use of the slope parameter from our kronos? we can find that parameter on the Midi Zone Tab where we set our layers and splits.
I'm so curious about that function as I don't have an idea whats the magic behind that parameter.
The bottom slope parameter lets you fade the volume in for the lower notes, and the top slope parameter lets you fade the volume out for the upper notes.
0 = no crossfade, full normal volumes within your key range
12 = one octave fade
24 = 2 octaves fade
These volume fades work *inside* the key range.
====================================
For example, let's say you create a keyboard range of B2 to B5 for a timbre/instrument.
The top key is B5, and the bottom key is B2. Anything higher than B5 or lower than B2 will not sound or respond to MIDI.
Normally, if you just leave the top and bottom slopes at 0, then the timbre will have normal volumes as you play notes between B2 and B5. As expected.
However, if instead you set the top and bottom slopes to 12, then at one octave below the top key, at B4, you will have full normal volume, but it will gradually start to get quieter until you reach your top key B5, at which point is will be almost silent.
Same thing for a bottom slope of 12. At one octave above the bottom note, at B3, notes will have the normal full volume range. But as you go lower from B3 to B2, by the time you reach B2, the notes will be silent.
====================================
In a nutshell, the slope parameter will gradually lower the volumes inside your key range by the amount you specify. It will be silent at your defined top and bottom keys, and the amount of slope determines how many semitones from the outer edge of your range (the top/bottom) until it's full volume again.
See the picture on page 467 of the Parameter Guide (v3.0.2) for a visual representation of how the volume is faded inside the keyboard range you define.
(I would have preferred the slopes to gradually lower the volume *outside* the key range, so you could just set the top and bottom notes, which would sound normally, then set the slopes to 12 so that the key range starts to fade once you start to leave the key range. But instead, the slopes affect the volumes *within* your key range).