Sei il primo che sento che la usa come solitamente faccio io. E' ottima anche per il drone dilatatissimo. Io ho la Mark1 - stessa macchina in sostanza.
What's called "ring modulation" on the MKI is called "cross modulation" on the MKII, but as far as I know it sounds exactly the same. Never made a real comparsion though. Some also say that the built quality of the MKII series is a bit more sturdy (a bit more metal and less plastic). But apart from that they really sound and play the same.
cross modulation is bi-directional pitch modulation between both osc's ..almost same effect as FM . Ring modulation is modulating the amplitude of one osc with the other, result is frequency sum /diffenrence .
Actually the result of ring mod isn't the sum but the product, the two amplitudes get multiplied. Adding them to a sum wouldn't be different to just mixing them. Ring mod is also bi-directional because A x B = B x A, there is no carrier and modulator, just two factors multiplyig to a product. But you are right, I just looked at a photo of the MKII and there's "cross mod" (between voices 1 and 2) as well as "ring mod" (between voice 4 and audio in), so there should be a difference between those. This would be easy to find out, somebody with an MKII could modulate voice 1 with a slow LFO, then switch on the cross mod and change the pitch of a plain voice 2 by hand. If this also changes the tempo of the LFO, it's a frequency cross mod, if not, it's something else.
You play it like how you supposed to... it is a drum synth after all... it’s an amazing machine
Thank you so much Reaz!!
@@FilippoFaleritym I have one stashed somewhere
I love my electribe I play on it constantly.
Awesome! 🙏🏻✨🕊✌🏻🌈😃
Awsome Perfomance
I enjoyed that! Thank you ;-)
Triplebacon Art thank you😃
Sei il primo che sento che la usa come solitamente faccio io. E' ottima anche per il drone dilatatissimo. Io ho la Mark1 - stessa macchina in sostanza.
Grazie Mitja! anche a me piace molto per fare questo tipo di suoni :) bella macchina!
Molto interessanti questi suoni alla Kraftwerk:-)
grazie davvero Marco! Questa macchinetta mi fa impazzire pure a me, per certe cose non c'è dsi o elektron che regga!:)
Trippy!
Not clear on whether this is JUST the electribe, or are you running other things (processors, etc.?)
Tony Hill no Tony is just the electribe with its own delay😊
That bass you got was really rich I don't think the first er1 can do that😔
Its the same engine so it most certainly can
It's exactly the same machine except for the new case, and instead of ring mod, the MK2 has cross mod.
i totally thought its was different but i was new when i wrote that @@christopher_ecclestone
@christopher_ecclestone does the cross mod and ring mod sound the same?
@@dpalaoro i dont think they would
Great demo is it worth the purchase? I thinking about to get one
peter bombala i don’t own it anymore Peter but for playing this kind of analog music is great, and also for some analog drums!
@@FilippoFaleritym I'm going to buy it thanks
Yes
I have the MKI version... is the only difference the paint job?
Dan Burkett i think so Dan!
What's called "ring modulation" on the MKI is called "cross modulation" on the MKII, but as far as I know it sounds exactly the same. Never made a real comparsion though. Some also say that the built quality of the MKII series is a bit more sturdy (a bit more metal and less plastic). But apart from that they really sound and play the same.
cross modulation is bi-directional pitch modulation between both osc's ..almost same effect as FM .
Ring modulation is modulating the amplitude of one osc with the other, result is frequency sum /diffenrence .
Actually the result of ring mod isn't the sum but the product, the two amplitudes get multiplied. Adding them to a sum wouldn't be different to just mixing them. Ring mod is also bi-directional because A x B = B x A, there is no carrier and modulator, just two factors multiplyig to a product. But you are right, I just looked at a photo of the MKII and there's "cross mod" (between voices 1 and 2) as well as "ring mod" (between voice 4 and audio in), so there should be a difference between those.
This would be easy to find out, somebody with an MKII could modulate voice 1 with a slow LFO, then switch on the cross mod and change the pitch of a plain voice 2 by hand. If this also changes the tempo of the LFO, it's a frequency cross mod, if not, it's something else.
What I said .