Making melodies from CV with Joranalogue Contour 1

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 28

  • @DemMusel
    @DemMusel Před 2 lety +2

    great tips, especially using same CV signal with multiple Quantizer channels with different triggers and offsets.

  • @treyvisqueux7973
    @treyvisqueux7973 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this accessible and well-explained tutorial -- subbed!

  • @zauwee
    @zauwee Před 9 měsíci

    Hey Tom, thanks for yet another excellent, informative video. Keep it up!

  • @jaygregory8219
    @jaygregory8219 Před 2 lety +2

    I have the Contour 1, Pams, and the Quadrat and never thought to use them together in that way. Brilliant! And the jam you had going by the end also sounded GREAT. Thanks for sharing!

    • @TomChurchill
      @TomChurchill  Před 2 lety

      Cheers Jay, glad you enjoyed it and got something out of it! 😀

  • @jnswrks
    @jnswrks Před rokem +1

    Love your video, this and Batumi one was really useful to me !!

  • @walrtbstudios5430
    @walrtbstudios5430 Před 2 lety +2

    Beautifully walked through and explained. I’ve not got the Contour module, but I do have the excellent Thorn VC LFO, which can both attenuate and sample-and-hold itself, which is cool. I’ve not explored the Disting’s quantiser functions though, so thanks for the suggestion!
    Subbed too. Good advice is hard to find…

    • @TomChurchill
      @TomChurchill  Před 2 lety

      Thank you! Appreciate the kind feedback. That Thorn VC LFO is on my wish list too - looks great!

  • @EiseniaFoetida
    @EiseniaFoetida Před rokem +2

    I love the Contour 1 but never thought to use it in this way. I also have Pam’s, Plaits, Disting, and other versions of the modules you’re using here so definitely going to be recreating this patch tonight. Great video and I can’t believe I’m just finding your channel. Subscribed!

    • @TomChurchill
      @TomChurchill  Před rokem +1

      Cheers, glad it was useful and thanks for the sub! :)

  • @bleepbloopsounds
    @bleepbloopsounds Před rokem +1

    Excellent video! Thank you.

  • @______BS______
    @______BS______ Před 4 měsíci

    this is seriously great

  • @jamesramsay5692
    @jamesramsay5692 Před 2 lety +1

    Really nice breakdown, very clearly explained. I've got Contour 1 and Pam's myself so will give this a go. Cheers

    • @TomChurchill
      @TomChurchill  Před 2 lety

      Glad it was helpful and thanks for watching :)

  • @MatthiasReinelt
    @MatthiasReinelt Před 2 lety +1

    Very useful and well explained, thanks!

  • @lockyp204
    @lockyp204 Před 2 lety +1

    You’re good at this. Subbed

  • @7177YT
    @7177YT Před 2 lety +1

    Lovely! Cheers!

  • @nodz007
    @nodz007 Před 2 lety +1

    MOAR please!

    • @TomChurchill
      @TomChurchill  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! I'm working on the next one today :)

  • @tris421
    @tris421 Před 2 lety

    joy orbison - fuerza.

  • @freddiefranklin1
    @freddiefranklin1 Před rokem

    Amazing demonstration! I'm currently just starting out in modular having recently bought a case with a couple of cheap modules and a semi modular synth (as well as some other hardware synths/sequencers). This type of thing is EXACTLY what I want to achieve with modular. Controlled randomness. PNW in the coming months and have a question for you. With the quantise functionality in Pam's, could you use that to send out a synced, quantised, offset LFO to Plaits and achieve the same thing? Potentially cutting out the disting, sample and hold and the envelope generator? Or am I overestimating the functionality of PNW?

    • @TomChurchill
      @TomChurchill  Před rokem

      Hey! Thanks for the feedback and glad you enjoyed it. To answer your question - I think you could get pretty close with PNW alone, but I think the main difference would be controlling the rhythm of the notes. If you had a tempo-synced LFO in Pam's with the output quantised, it would just change note values as the LFO's level reached each threshold, which probably wouldn't correspond to the rhythm you want (although it might sound cool!) - if that makes sense?
      The advantage of a dedicated quantiser is you can use a separate trigger pattern to choose exactly when it will grab a note value and how long it will hold it. Plus with an external envelope/function generator it's probably easier to modulate the rise/fall time and their curves (although you can definitely do some of this in PNW if you assign the CV inputs).
      There might be a way to do it that I haven't thought of using multiple channels on Pam's though - I'll have a play around and let you know if I come up with anything!

    • @freddiefranklin1
      @freddiefranklin1 Před rokem

      @@TomChurchill thanks for getting back to me. So I know on PNW you can do things like euclydian sequencing so perhaps I haven't quite got my head around how this works vs how the LFO's work. I don't have have PNW yet anyway so for now I've just picked up a cheap quantiser and a cheap S&H so will give this all a go! I've just built out something similar in VCV Rack and it sounds so complex and lush so really looking forward to trying it out with hardware! Getting so much from your videos. Thanks a lot!

  • @Mr.Tubster
    @Mr.Tubster Před 2 lety +1

    :)

  • @freetimeprojex
    @freetimeprojex Před 8 měsíci

    i watched this on mute. the hands are mad active.