"Months ago i've finished my sound lab now i've enough time to post some pictures
It's a classic sound lab plus a VC Vactrol delay and an integrated PAIA theremax as VC source.It has also the guitar trigger and a microphone trigger."
Click on the image for a much larger shot. Check out the thread for more. Images backed up here.
2nd one is processing nothing but it's own internal distortion and compression circuits, being sequenced by a fat controller to help provide movement. The Fat Controller is only sequencing the Cutoff Freq....not the Reso. The rest is all knobbery.
Please post comments on my myspace page if you are already a friend. Not the best demo, and very very limited in specific application.
you should hear what this thing does to guitars!!!
I have a gazzillion mb movie of jaming with the MDUW / Ebbe setup ...but have no way to send it or share it, lol. Idiot.
This was requested at least 2 dozen times. Sorry I didn't capture more, but it's 4:15 am and I have to work in 2 hours.
"This is a new kind of programmable sequencer. Each step can drive other sequencers or clock sources. For instance, in this video I am running one clock source into Row 1 -not into the other Rows. Each of Row 1's step outputs 1, 2, 3, 4, are sending a clock signal to Rows 2-4. Steps on Rows 2-4 are sending signals out to each other. I forgot the exact patch ;C
The Rows are CV'ing 4 simple ghettofied vactrol oscillators.
Here is an example: if you want Row 2 to advance one count everytime Row 1 hits it's 3rd step, you would run a patch from Row 1's 3rd step to Row 2's clock input. You can also run a patch out from Row 2 to Row 1 to allow even more crazy complex sequences.
I used banana jacks because I did not want to use multiple strips. It's 42HP Eurorack.
This is a very SMALL sequencer and I do have one planned for bi-directional sequencing, reset, step amount, etc etc etc. Basically the super duper version is going to be freaking huge -probably 80HP in Eurorack.
If anyone wants to buy it or find out more info on it, hit me up at synthmonger[AT]gmail.com"
"The music band/group/entity Gowns are on tour right now. If you haven't heard of them, Gowns consist of Ezra Buchla, who has been known to use a 200e live, Erika Anderson, a fellow South Dakotan and therefore automatically a badass, and Corey Fogel, who I don't have anything clever to say about, but I'm sure is very nice.
They'll be in Chicago next friday the 13th (ooh, i'm so scared). I'll be there.
"This is a demo of the Retrosynth MiniROM loaded with PPG wavetables courtesy of Jason Proctor. The Miniwave is being driven from the sawtooth output of a Serge PCO scaled and offset through an audio mixer and scaling buffer. The wave select on the Miniwave is modulated by a Universal Slope Generator with gain and offset from a CV mixer. The output of the Miniwave is patched directly into the dual channel stereo mixer module for final level adjustment and then it's off to a small Roland MA-8 monitor."
Update via retrosynth in the comments: "There are 64 waves in each PPG wavetable bank and a stock Blacet Miniwave can only do 16 waves per bank. Plus there are only 16 banks in a stock Miniwave. The board I made allows for 32 banks of 64 waves each. That's 8X more samples per ROM. Jason Proctor provided me the wavetables. I'm just the hardware monkey that made them fit in a Miniwave socket. Some pictures here: [link]"