Kinda forgot that Doepfer has a Spring Reverb in their line-up. But never too late to get a gem like this.
Kinda forgot that Doepfer has a Spring Reverb in their line-up. But never too late to get a gem like this.
Fear for his sanity, really.
Fear not the man who has made 10,000 different kickdrums once, but the same kickdrum 10,000 times.
The version after should include actual tree seeds.
You only get points for each acorn collected from the trees you planted.
Weirdly, using more cables didn't fix the problem.
In general? Morphagene.
For basslines? Any basic oscillator and a ladder filter like the 100Grit.
Fx? Arbhar, Clouds, Magneto, Sealegs, Mimeophon, tons of options!
Look at these beauties! Thanks to b:art instruments, a new Polish Eurorack maker, for sending these over.
Can't wait to review them!
Thanks for putting this together!
Highly recommend Trevor Wishart's book "On Sonic Art" for an introduction to electroacoustic music thinking. It's from the 1980s but crucially, the book describes itself as a book not about the how of music transformation and structuring but the why.
I actually never tried exactly that. It's on my to do list now! Thanks!
True! It certainly took me a long time to appreciate silence when composing music.
Just a quick heads up: if you are into Eurorack and contemporary music theory. I do short essays about combining those on YouTube. Have a look: youtu.be/jyUJjNDN3Pk
This module started my Eurorack journey almost 8 years ago, and it's still simply the best creative sampler I could ever wish for.
One of the first lessons of my master in electroacoustic music composition was on the importance of time (and space) in music. As music is a time-based medium that in itself can represent compressed, expanded or long past time, their interactions are quite intricate! More here: youtu.be/_wvOJ3uOB7I
Eurorack synthesisers made German national news.
Great having seen Eurorack leaving its niche status behind and establishing itself as a format to stay! www.tagesschau.de/inland/gesel...
A "Wunderkammer" is a Renaissance concept in which a room is dedicated to showcase collected curiosities of the world. In a way, the original man-cave.