
"Meet Modulor for AudioCubes, a new software application for the AudioCubes hardware platform.
We are very excited to release this – it’s the result of one year of very hard development work, in which we focused on implementing topology detection in the AudioCubes firmware.
It’s now possible for AudioCubes to detect each other in a network, and forward data to each other within the network. This means that AudioCubes can be configured or colours can be set through other AudioCubes, and that you only have to have one AudioCube connected to talk to the rest.
Modulor is the first application to take advantage of this exciting upgrade. It’s an application developed specifically for people who like to create their musical ideas using building blocks (e.g. loops of MIDI data).
The software lets you record loops into cubes using your favourite MIDI controller, and then combine those loops simply by putting cubes together. Colour coding can be used, for example to remember which loop is where or what key the loop is in.
Besides recording and playing back loops, it’s also possible to process MIDI data, from loops or from live input, for example, using arpeggiators, chord generators, transposition, echos, … each cube can have one MIDI effect, and by forming networks of cubes you can create processing chains for MIDI data.
The application is a VST instrument host, so you can run it all by itself, and load your favourite software instruments. The resulting MIDI can be recorded to disk as a MIDI file with multiple tracks, one for each software instrument, which lets you bring your project into your favourite DAW software.
The application was in development for over a year, and we’ve decided to release it as a free download. More details can be read at http://www.percussa.com/uses/composition/ and http://www.percussa.com/applications/modulor/"
These be so silly. Complex editors, expensive hardware, for what seems so basic and simple.
ReplyDeleteIt's like someone decided to make a music sequencer controlled by mountain climbers at different altitudes and positions. Just seems horribly involved and painful.
Fancy-shmancy Ableton Live controllers.
ReplyDeleteI'm really scratching my head here.
Why not mimes playing laser theremins or something zany.
Or conducting concerts by the relative positions of sheep being herded by an Anatolian Shepherd Dog.