With Cascadia, the Canadian Eurorack forge Intellijel presents its first stand-alone synthesizer. Cascadia is semi-modular, which means that many functions are interconnected (normalized), for which otherwise a cable would have to be patched. With 101 patch jacks designed as inputs or outputs, you have absolute freedom to rebuild your signal path at least partially, add or replace functions, and integrate Eurorack modules or other semi-modular synthesizers at will respectively create interactions. Missing the VCO B at the top of the mixer? Just patch the desired waveform eg. into In2 and make the connection - done. The manufacturer has made a big hit, because Cascadia combines the best of West Coast and East Coast synthesis. This refers to technical procedures and approaches of the very first modular systems by Moog and Buchla, which still have their justification today and are built into current instruments and modules.
Almost no function is available more than once; main functions such as the oscillators, envelopes and VCAs do exist twice, but in different configurations. This provides even more flexibility and exponentially increases the musical potential. Oscillator A masters among other things PWM, Thru-Zero FM as well as Hard- and Softsync. In addition, a sub-oscillator with -1/-2 octave spacing follows the frequency of VCO A. The waveforms of the first tone generator are combined in the mixer and also output. The levels of the ring modulator, the noise generator and the sub oscillator are also available in the mixer. The
The mixer is followed by the 24dB mutimode filter with eight different characteristics covering lowpass, bandpass, highpass, notch and even phaser. For modulating the filter there are four CV inputs with attenuators, which should be enough in most cases. Parallel to the filter a wavefolder is implemented on whose input the sine of VCO A is pre-patched. If you go by the normalizations, VCA A is the end of the signal path, this is equipped with a minimixer with
Of course, VCA A cannot be the absolute end of the signal path in Cascadia. On the upper edge there are controls for Send, Return and Mix, these refer to the connectors of the same name on the rear panel, it is a loop-in path for effects units with guitar or line level! The signal flow is consistently kept in mono. Before whatever signal leaves Cascadia the really last stage is an adjustable distortion.
What would such a well equipped synthesizer be without its modulation sources! The first one is a USB/MIDI interface that outputs eight voltages along with MIDI LFO, gate, clock and trigger. The most important modulation sources are the two envelopes. Envelope A is an extended H-ADSR with some finesse and Envelope B is a very flexible function generator. In plain language EnvB acts as an AD/AR envelope, can be an LFO, an oscillator and even a
The middle section contains a number of other functions that ultimately put Cascadia on par with a comparably equipped modular system. Here, too, most inputs and outputs are normalized and accordingly interchangeable. Sample & Hold is initially composed of the