3
1
Back

Back surdo (L for low, H for high R/L Accented note (right/left hand suggested)

r/l
Quieter, unaccented note
*
A trill, generally three very fast notes on repique/caixa, two or three for surdos Common break specific to Samba Reggae 1 is probably the most common samba reggae rhythm; it's a simple circuit that generates a sequence of 8 voltages controllable by individual knobs. MK's 5-step sequencer, expanded to 8 notes means ~$16-20 in parts, needing only one tl074 and support Kassutronic's KS-20 https://kassu2000.blogspot.com/2019/07/ks-20-filter.html ** uses an LM13700 OTA (operational transconductance amplifier) (~$1.50, uncommon, and DIP marked obsolete) and NE5532 (uncommon, 80¢ based on the Gate In jack and switching ground contact, vertical PCB mount, https://www.neutrik.com/en/product/nl8md-v-1 speakON Chassis Connectors, 4 pole male XLR receptacle, grounding: mating connector shell and front panel, vertical PCB mount, https://www.neutrik.com/en/product/nl4md-v speakON Chassis Connectors, 8 pole chassis connector, nickel metal square G-size flange, countersunk thru holes, horizontal PCB mount, black chrome shell, https://www.neutrik.com/en/product/nc3fbv1-b B Series, 3 pole male XLR receptacle, grounding: separate.

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