Turn2On HarmBode User Manual

Introducing a variation of a legendary analog frequency shifter. HARMBODE shifts the spectrum of a signal by a fixed amount. BODE (TM) Shifter is not a pitch-shitfer, but allows you to shift inharmonics in Hz. Sometimes it can sound like a ring modulator effect, but with HARMBODE it is possible to get an upshifted and downshifted signal. With some settings you can hear the effect known as "Barberpole flanger" as well as a 90 degree phase shifter.
The original analog Bode 735 Freq Shifter (TM) was designed by Harold Bode in the 1960’s and was also used in the Moog (TM) modular system. HARMBODE attempts to reproduce this Bode freq shifter (TM) in Reason Rack Extension format.
Today Freq shifters popular in world of guitar pedals and modular synths, in world of software synths and FXs.
Try the legendary freq shifter in your Reason rack today!
Visit us: turn2on.com
HarmBode
Frequency Shifter
[RACK EXTENSION] v. 1.0
MANUAL
2018
FX device by Turn2on Software
* All product names, trademarks and registered trademarks are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, trademarks and brands does not imply endorsement.
THEORY OF BODE FQ SHIFTER
Pitch shifting uses delay with the clock on the output shifted up or down to change the frequency of the notes you're playing.
A frequency shifter is basically one half of a ring modulator. ! While a ring modulator takes an input signal and a modulation signal and produces the sum and difference frequencies, a frequency shifter produces only the sum frequencies, or the different frequencies. It outputs these separate frequencies and invoques fancy filtering.
When you turn up controls, you can get glissandos, barberpole flanging, or soft echos that seem to rotate around you.
Some refer to this effect as a ring-modulator, but it is not true. Its Bode Frequency shifter with Hilbert transformation effect (rotate copy of signal to 90 degrees). Frequency shifters can sound like bells because they shift inharmonics, which sounds exactly like ring modulation. In technical language it is known as single- sideband modulation.
It is arguably one of the most underrated and ignored effects in the industry.
If you blend a slightly shifted signal with the original signal you can get some phasing. The harmonic structure of the dry signal with the processed signal can sound as an inharmonic effect, much like a bell.
Freq shifters shifts up all frequency content up by the same amount, thus altering the frequency relationships. As example, the 100 Hz tone go up to 200 Hz, and the 200Hz tone go up to 300 Hz instead.
HARMBODE frequency shifter can shift all of the frequencies of the input signal with up, down, up/down, and down/up modes. These modes create dissonance to the incoming signal, breaking harmonic structure.
With frequency shifters it is possible to touch on other aspects of Phaser effects.
With variations of small and big shifts, it can break the harmonics of many instruments, but with many percussion style sounds, a frequency shifter can change the tone and the effect can be very musical.
Small shifts gave deep phasing effects, larger shifts with notes changes is break harmonic structure and create dissonance. Intresting to know the history - originally freq shifters was help to reduce mic feedbacks in halls.
The effect uses a Hilbert Transform, that contains 2 seperate channels - Real and Imaginary. Real and Imag are summed after the Frequency Shifter block where they are mixed with the dry signal.
Note: Ring modulation is equivalent to double-sideband suppressed-carrier modulation, whereas a frequency shifter is equivalent to single-sideband modulation.
INPUT
Hilbert
Transform
Filter
REAL
IMAG 90 degree
FreqShifter
MIX
OUTPUT
FEEDBACK
- SCALE!
- SHIFT
DRY
Loading...
+ 2 hidden pages