Alligator Triple Filtered Gate : Methods and Tips

Methods and Tips
Playing the Alligator live
The three gates in the Alligator can be triggered by the MIDI notes F#1, G#1 and A#1, with the lowest note controlling the low pass filter channel and so on. This can be very useful when playing live:
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This could be a recorded pad, a loop or even the full mix.
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This creates a track with a note lane for the Alligator.
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Remember that the gates are velocity sensitive and that the Amp Envelope settings affect the gated sound.
Playing the gates from Matrix patterns
While the 64 built-in patterns are rather versatile, sometimes you might want to create your very own patterns. The easiest way to achieve this is to connect Matrix Pattern Sequencers:
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It is automatically connected to one of the Gate inputs on the backside. The Curve CV output on the Matrix is automatically connected to the corresponding CV Freq input on the Alligator.
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Note that you need to select the Alligator for the Matrix to be auto-routed to the Gate and CV Freq inputs. Now you have three Matrix devices, one for each gate/channel.
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The Curve can be used for controlling the Filter Frequency of the corresponding frequency band in the Alligator.
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Controlling other sounds and effects
The gate outputs on the Alligator back panel allow you to control other stuff with the built-in Alligator patterns. Here’s an example:
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You might want to tweak the sound as well, change the filter settings, adjust fx and pan, etc.
With some tweaking, the filtered pattern can sound a bit like a drum beat or percussion loop. Then it can be nice to add some punch and bottom to the Low Pass channel, making it feel more like a kick drum or bass line:
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Now the bass drum sound is triggered along with Gate 3, played by the Alligator’s pattern player.
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Alligator Triple Filtered Gate : Methods and Tips