Baby Steps - Observations from my first few days
Jan 4, 2019 22:45:44 GMT
NightMachines, thetechnobear, and 4 more like this
Post by admin on Jan 4, 2019 22:45:44 GMT
So it took a while for me to get a real system and while I was already totally convinced that this is the bee's knees for all those last months, having the real thing in front of me feels like a revelation! It's a real proper modular, it's fun, it's gritty and has it's quirks, it's hands on and raw. Best of all, it doesn't remember ... you don't like the patch, just unplug everything and start from scratch. And even if you like you patch, the process of unplugging and erasing your work of the last few hours feels liberating!
Now that I have a fully functioning modular synth and have spent a few days with it, I have made the following observations. To all of you seasoned modular veterans this may by old hat, but I'm a newbie to this and maybe other newbies like me can find something useful in the following list:
Overall I'm very happy with the whole system. I played with VCV Rack on the PC over the last few months, but I find the physicality of the patching and turning real knobs so much more engaging.
I have a few more experiments planned which I'll post about later, mostly about integrating the AE Modular with my iPad, SonicPi on the laptop, how to record the sounds while filming yourself and how to make the whole thing really mobile and take it to the park. (I know that NightMachines has made some videos about some of this already).
Below my first patch ... I've used the Zoom H1n as an audio interface connected to my iPad, so that when I shot the video with the iPad camera the sound was recorded straight via the Zoom and not the iPad microphone.
Now that I have a fully functioning modular synth and have spent a few days with it, I have made the following observations. To all of you seasoned modular veterans this may by old hat, but I'm a newbie to this and maybe other newbies like me can find something useful in the following list:
- you can never have too many LFOs
- even if you have a huge amount of patch leads, you will almost need at least one more
- envelopes that can be retriggered (the new 2ENV) are awesome (and serve as LFOs!)
- in an analogue system power and hum and noise are real, but usually can be dealt with by careful attenuation along the signal path
- the tiny patch cables are really tiny and sometimes it is really fiddly to patch them into adjacent sockets when your patch is really complex ... maybe it's a sign to stop patching and start tweaking
- once you have patched more than 15 leads things become interesting and weird as you struggle to keep up with what goes where and just enjoy the sounds
- the AE Modular patch cables are colour coded for the different lengths which is great! I'm slowly learning which cable to use to bridge a certain distance in the patch
- at first I kept the cables neatly in their individual satchels, but now I just have them all jumbled up in a box and it's much easier to find them and to take them out for the patch. Also much simpler to put them back
- stop patching and fiddle with the knobs! Really, the magic happens in those tiny increments when two waveforms align just ... so
- tuning is a chore, I don't know how people do it, I'm waiting for a proper quantizer to come out
- sometimes the MIDI module goes into an endless loop when you send two MIDI notes at the same time, you can reset it by just switching from Channel 1 to Omni and back
- Playing with a MIDI keyboard is ... ok ... but not as much fun (to me at least) as just delving into sequences and drones
- you want a proper Kick, Snare and Hihat ... I've emulated this with noise fed thru VCA with quick envelopes, but that's nowhere near as good as a proper drum sound ... and it takes up valuable modulation sources from the rest of the patch
- I wish I could introduce more variability into a composition. I've used the S&H and Noise to randomly trigger a Hihat and I also used the S&H to create a random bassline, but without a quantiser it is usually off-tune and I've used it only very low in the background. Have people used the VCSwitch module for this with much success?
- You can emulate a sine wave by patching a triangle through a filter, but then you need to amplify it as it loses much of its volume in the process, a proper sine wave oscillator would be great!
- It's really easy to just always come back to the same kind of patch ... I have to force myself to go into new directions and to try different things
Overall I'm very happy with the whole system. I played with VCV Rack on the PC over the last few months, but I find the physicality of the patching and turning real knobs so much more engaging.
I have a few more experiments planned which I'll post about later, mostly about integrating the AE Modular with my iPad, SonicPi on the laptop, how to record the sounds while filming yourself and how to make the whole thing really mobile and take it to the park. (I know that NightMachines has made some videos about some of this already).
Below my first patch ... I've used the Zoom H1n as an audio interface connected to my iPad, so that when I shot the video with the iPad camera the sound was recorded straight via the Zoom and not the iPad microphone.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BsMb8jFFlMA