Wobble 2.0 Explained

Synth master Al Swettenham breaks down the powerful SONiVOX's Wobble 2.0 virtual instrument step by step, so you can grasp the amazing griminess and power this plug-in has to offer, and make it yours.

Videos
Introduction & Overview (06:11) - In this video Al gives a brief tour and overview of the interface, drawing attention to Wobble's four main pages; the Sound Page, the Pattern Page, the Effects Page and the Browser page. Al also briefly cover the options available to us in the settings panel.
The Browser Page (06:37) - Follow along as Al covers Wobble's browser, an intelligent tool for finding exactly the sounds you're looking for by filtering patches by attributes. Al also demonstrate loading preset patches and saving edited patches and applying attributes to them.
The Sound Page (14:13) - In this video Al discusses and demonstrates all the features as well as Wobble's handy MIDI learn function which allows us to quickly and easily assign parameters to be controlled by a MIDI controller.
The Pattern Page Pt. 1 (12:51) - Wobble's Pattern Page houses an intelligent and versatile pattern generator. This is perfect for creating complex and interesting wobble sequences and is great fun to play with. Over the next two videos Al expounds the pattern generator and demonstrates it's power and versatility.
The Pattern Page Pt. 2 (05:24) - Al demonstrates how the Pattern Page can be used for classic arpeggiator sequences as well as the function of Wobble's Intelligent Rhythm Control section which can turn a rhythmically lose performance into a tight one!
The Effects Page (09:10) - This is the final page in Wobbles interface. Here you have three high quality audio effects; a tempo synced stereo delay, a chorus and a reverb. These can add extra body and richness to the timbre of Wobble. Al explains the parameters of each effect and also demonstrate how you can use the MIDI learn function to map controllers to them just like in the Sound Page.
Wobble in Action (10:45) - In this video Al puts wobble into action by creating some dubstep riffs using the pattern generator. Al also demonstrates a great way of improvising spontaneous sequences on the fly, great for line performance!