Behringer Phara-PO Mini – Lead Sound Creation Guide

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The Phara-PO Mini is a compact analog synth inspired by classic East-Coast designs. While small, it’s perfectly capable of strong, expressive lead sounds—from smooth analog leads to aggressive electro or funk tones.

This guide walks you through a solid, versatile lead patch you can tweak to taste.


1. Oscillator Section (The Core Tone)

  • Waveform: Sawtooth
    (Alternative: Pulse/Square for a hollow lead)
  • Octave: 8’ (standard lead range)

Why this works:
The sawtooth is harmonically rich and responds well to filtering, making it ideal for expressive leads.


2. Filter Section (Shape the Character)

  • Filter Type: Low-Pass
  • Cutoff: ~60–70%
  • Resonance: ~20–30%
  • Keyboard Tracking: On (if available)

Purpose:
Keeps the sound warm and present while allowing it to cut through the mix. A bit of resonance adds a vocal, nasal edge without whistling.


3. Filter Envelope (Movement & Expression)

This is where the lead comes alive.

  • Attack: Short (not instant)
  • Decay: Medium
  • Sustain: Medium-Low
  • Release: Medium
  • Envelope Amount: Medium

Effect:
Each note opens slightly at the start, then settles—perfect for classic analog lead phrasing.


4. Amp Envelope (Playability Matters)

  • Attack: Slightly slow
  • Decay: Medium
  • Sustain: High
  • Release: Medium

Why:
A softer attack avoids harsh clicks and allows notes to flow into each other, especially when playing legato lines.


5. Glide / Portamento (Highly Recommended)

  • Glide: ON
  • Glide Time: Short to Medium

This adds smooth pitch transitions between notes and instantly makes the lead feel more expressive and musical.


6. Modulation (Subtle Is Key)

LFO

  • Destination: Pitch
  • Rate: Slow
  • Depth: Very subtle

Use vibrato sparingly—just enough to add life on sustained notes.

If modulation routing allows:

  • Control vibrato depth manually for expressive bends.

7. Effects (External or Minimal Internal)

The Phara-PO Mini benefits from simple effects.

  • Delay: Short or tempo-synced
  • Reverb: Small room or plate
  • Chorus: Optional, very light

Avoid heavy effects—the lead should stay upfront and focused.


8. Playing Style (Half the Sound)

  • Play legato
  • Let notes overlap (especially with glide on)
  • Use melodic phrases, not fast runs
  • Best range: C3–C6

Great lead sounds feel almost like a voice, not a keyboard.


Quick Variations

Smooth Analog Lead

  • Lower cutoff slightly
  • Reduce resonance
  • Longer release

Aggressive Electro Lead

  • Higher cutoff
  • More resonance
  • Faster filter envelope decay

Funk / Talky Lead

  • Slightly lower cutoff
  • Medium resonance
  • Add short delay

Troubleshooting

Too harsh?
→ Lower cutoff or envelope amount

Too dull?
→ Increase cutoff or resonance slightly

Not expressive enough?
→ Increase glide time or add subtle vibrato


Final Tip

A great analog lead is about:

  • Simple waveforms
  • Envelope movement
  • Confident playing

Don’t over-design the patch—let the synth breathe.


This setup gives you a strong, flexible lead sound on the Behringer Phara-PO Mini, suitable for funk, electro, hip-hop, synthwave, and classic analog solos.

admin
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