Tides v2 as a Polyrhythmic Clock (eurorack patch idea)

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  • čas přidán 28. 07. 2024
  • And here we observe the modular nerd in his natural environment, describing the characteristics of clock signals, and how to contort Mutable Instruments Tides v2 into being useful as a clock.
    0:00 Intro
    0:30 Clock signals
    4:20 Creating clock signals in Tides
    6:35 Sync'ing Tides
    7:30 Multiplying and Dividing
    10:20 Audio Demo
    14:00 Mini Jam
    #eurorack #mutableinstruments #tides #tides2 #tidesv2 #tutorial #patchidea
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 27

  • @GeorgeLocke
    @GeorgeLocke Před 2 měsíci

    I was watching your description of a clock signal as a square wave, my nerd meters pinging, sending me into "well, actually" mode. Then you finished the discussion by pointing out how the leading edge is what really matters, and systems returned to normal. ❤

  • @InVacuo
    @InVacuo Před 3 lety +3

    Really enjoyed this little series, very informative and I think I'll be getting a Tides in the future.
    But also thanks for the clock signal info, it's really helpful to know that just the leading edge is important. 👍

  • @chrissearle23
    @chrissearle23 Před 3 lety +1

    Simply the best tutorials i have ever watched! Clear and well explained. Thank you! you have a new subscriber!

  • @vincentsky
    @vincentsky Před 3 lety +3

    This video has been sorely missing from the universe. thank you!

  • @CinematicLaboratory
    @CinematicLaboratory Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for sharing. This a really cool idea. I love those rhythms and I don't think I've heard something like this anywhere.

  • @acefstripe
    @acefstripe Před rokem

    These Tides vids are really appreciated, helping me to not just stare at the thing.. lol. ❤️

  • @antoinekerglonou1546
    @antoinekerglonou1546 Před 3 lety

    Great module, great video !

  • @wes2819
    @wes2819 Před 2 lety

    very good Tides videos :)

  • @NICUofficial
    @NICUofficial Před 2 lety

    I'm just binging on your Tides videos, lol :)

  • @jessewarren817
    @jessewarren817 Před 3 lety +4

    Who needs a Pam’s??? Haha

    • @TheNimasan
      @TheNimasan Před 2 lety

      2 completely different modules. tides is fantastic, i got it couple of dyas ago and this guy does simply the best tutorials...bar none! but pams is a must in every system. i have 2!!!

  • @alkali6
    @alkali6 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video! I have a question about how you were describing clocks though. The video suggests that clocks have to have a short rise time on the leading edge to register with other modules. I was under the impression that the majority of eurorack modules use a comparator circuit so that any oscillation can be used as a clock as long as the leading edge goes above a specific voltage. Do you know which scenario most modules follow?
    Also 120/60 = 2 not 0.5 :P

    • @ferrycollider
      @ferrycollider  Před 3 lety +3

      Modules, particularly digital ones, will use different technique to recognize triggers and measure the duration between them. A lot of modern modules will recognize any signal that crosses 0v, going from negative to positive, as being a "trigger", but not every module does this the same. Some digital modules keep a limited "look back" history that only holds a certain amount of time, which might exclude triggers that don't abruptly rise or fall. By making your clocks a rising edge, they have the highest chance to work correctly with every module. You are correct in that it's not absolutely required for every module that they be a rising edge, more so that it ends up being the most compatible by doing it that way. You can test it out with your own modules by patching a slow sine wave LFO to the clock input and seeing what it does (also interesting is to pass audio rate stuff and see what it does lol). And, yeah, as soon as you hit "record", it's amazing how unclear doing math on the spot becomes. :)

    • @alkali6
      @alkali6 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ferrycollider cool, thanks for the response! Sometimes it is confusing what will or won’t work with eurorack because the manuals are not that great. I am more used to working with clocks, trigger, scopes, etc in a science research setting where the electronic equipment is documented with every tiny detail.
      Also when the record button has been hit ones mouth has a mind of its own and cannot be controlled

  • @venasc
    @venasc Před 2 lety

    Hey, thanks for the great videos! =) What is the hidden drum module producing the drums at 14:33 ? regards

    • @ferrycollider
      @ferrycollider  Před 2 lety

      Roland TR-8s. If I recall, I was using MIDI out from the TR into Mutant Brain, which is how its synchronized.

  • @Brumata
    @Brumata Před rokem

    I was just thinking about getting an extra clock divider when I thought, “I bet my Tides can do this. I’d better check.”
    Thank you for this series. So clutch!👏

  • @temporoboto
    @temporoboto Před rokem

    brilliant💙stuff

  • @totopolo2379
    @totopolo2379 Před rokem

    120bpm / 60 secs is actually 2hz straight ... 0.5 secs per beat looked confusion

  • @kevinj.oconner788
    @kevinj.oconner788 Před rokem

    Technically 120 divided by 60 is 2…

  • @joshk2181
    @joshk2181 Před rokem

    This is polymeter not polyrhythms. You need Fractio solum for that

  • @LaurentLaborde
    @LaurentLaborde Před 2 lety

    120 / 60 = 0.5 so it's 2Hz ... Well... no. 120/60 = 2 (Hz)
    But what you really wanted to do is :
    60/120 = 0.5s per cycle
    Hertz is s^-1 so :
    (60/120)^-1 = 0.5^-1 = 1/0.5 = 2Hz
    Which is the same thing as 60/120
    TL;DR : bpm/60 = second per cycle ; 60/bpm = Hertz (aka : cycle per second)
    PS : Tides v2 is

    • @LaurentLaborde
      @LaurentLaborde Před 2 lety

      aaaanyway : 120 / 60 = 0.5 is super wrong :)

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, I think he was confused, wrote 120/60 but thought 120)60 (sorry, that's as close to a long division symbol as I can make on a keyboard, hehe). Also, your TL;DR is incorrect. bpm/60 means seconds is in the denominator, so it's cycles per second, aka Hz. 60/bpm is seconds per cycle.

    • @LaurentLaborde
      @LaurentLaborde Před 2 lety

      @@jc3drums916 woops :D

  • @ComposerMichaelDow
    @ComposerMichaelDow Před 10 měsíci

    Polymetric not poly rhythmic 👍