Alongside the aforementioned individual tap timing/offset, distortion (oh, how we’d like to overdrive those taps!) and delay time modulation are obvious wants and while the multiscreen interface works really well by and large, flipping between the eight pages gets momentarily confusing at times. The visualisation of tap output is excellent, too, with each one running a dedicated stereo volume meter behind its column on all pages of the main interface apart from, oddly, Filter Type.Īs great as Tekturon is, however, it does suffer from a few minor shortcomings.
Turn on the tapsĭespite its easy workflow and relatively simple control scheme, Tekturon is capable of generating wonderfully elaborate and fluid filtered multitap delay lines, funky grooves, mad temporal adventures and spatialising effects, going light years beyond anything you could ever get from a regular stereo delay.Īnd it’s worth noting that every parameter for every tap can be not only automated in the host DAW, but also assigned a MIDI CC for performance control. Finally, the filter is covered in Fully filtered. The bipolar Pan sliders move the taps left or right, of course, while Spread (also bipolar) offsets the right or left channels by up to half the Time Grid setting, widening the signal either way. Each tap feeds into its own short processing chain, which consists of a panner, a stereo phase shifter and a multimode resonant filter. The timings of the feedback repeats are adjusted in the Delay page, where a multiplier of the base delay time from x1 to x16 is set per tap, and it’s here - along with the manipulation of tap levels and mutes - that the raw rhythmic magic happens.
With Global Feedback set to 75% and a given tap’s Feedback at 50% (or vice versa), for example, the actual feedback amount for that tap will be 37.5%. Raising the amount faders in the Feedback page scales the Global Feedback setting for each tap. The inability to set - or at least offset - individual tap times is a sticking point, although at least swing can be applied with the Shuffle knob, which progressively lags the even numbered taps.
The spacing or note value of the taps is set in the Time Grid section, either unsynced (choose a value between 1ms and 500ms per step), or synced at 1/8, 1/16, 1/32 or 1/64, straight, dotted or triplet.Īt 1/16, one pass of the ‘sequence’ takes a bar (in 4/4 time), and at 1/64, the pattern cycles with every beat, so there’s plenty of range in terms of tap timing and tempo. We would, however, prefer it if we could edit Cutoff and Resonance in the same page (a pair of colour-coded sliders on each tap, perhaps?), as jumping between two pages to access these most interdependent of parameters can get tiresome.Īdditionally, the first tap of the sequence can be silenced - to prevent it clashing with the dry signal - by clicking the Mute Tap 1 button. Rolling off at 24dB/octave, Tekturon’s filter sounds fantastic, and sequencing it is a lot of fun. Further to that, you can also untie each tap’s filter mode from the default Master Filter setting and switch it to any of the four modes (HP, LP, BP, Off) independently in the Filter Type page. Dragging the bipolar sliders up and down in the Cutoff and Resonance pages of the main display then offsets these values for each tap, enabling sequencing of the filter throughout the delay pattern, with the Master Filter knobs applying collective adjustment and sweeping. In the Global section, the Master Filter controls set base Cutoff and Resonance values, as well as the filter mode (High-Pass, Band-Pass, Low-Pass or Off) deployed for all taps by default. Essential to the effectiveness of any multitap delay is a quality filter, and Tekturon’s, we’re happy to report, is a beauty.