Jamuary 2025 – A Reflection

AI is just as prone to mistakes as the rest of us.

Let me get this out there first. Jamuary, while highly rewarding in many aspects, was absolutely exhausting. The self-induced compulsion to create and record something musical everyday for a month is an arduous task, even in the best of times. When life gets in the way, as it inevitably does, finding the time required to create something can be a challenge, and finding the creative energy to pull through severe time constraints is even harder. Just this month, I’ve created (and written about – another aspect of patching for me) nearly three dozen pieces of music ranging from complicated and sprawling eurorack patches to fairly simple and minimally inspired jams on the iPad. That is about 60% the total number of recordings I made all of last year. Nearly six hours (5:59:46) over 33 new recordings in 31 days is an incredible feat for me.

I’m proud of that accomplishment.

I didn’t come into Jamuary with the goal of making a recording every day. Like last year, I sought to do one every three or four days. Between work and family, life is busy. But with 2505 something happened. I had just made my seventh recording in five days, and creating 2505 was a really exciting experience for me. It was the first ambient patch I’d made with my Verbos system, and I was filled with ideas. I was on a roll, and determined to do more than last year. By 2510, I had resigned myself to recording something everyday. And so that’s what I did. On days I could take my time, I made a larger patch on the main synth. On days when I was more pressed I learned to use iPad instruments or worked up quick(er) patches on the Make Noise synth. Jamuary is less about product and more about producing. To act creatively everyday in a bid to spark more creativity. The more you do, the more you will do. There’s something to that idea because, despite having a level of fatigue and with zero intentions, I made an iPad patch on February 1st too, and recorded a beautiful patch on my Make Noise system on the 2nd.

During Jamuary I purposefully sought to do new things. To try new patching techniques or use new gear, and to use underused gear in ways I haven’t used them before. During this process I used several new (to me) techniques like ring modulation, creating dynamic triggers, and amplitude modulation using modulated noise. I purposefully sought to learn some more complex timing techniques with triggers and gates when more than one thing would happen at a time. I learned to use some of these instruments in ways I hadn’t before. It’s been an incredibly eye opening experience that has given me ideas which will take me deep into the rest of the year when I can more intentionally create without daily time constraints. Patching daily has helped to shed light on where I need improvement in my practice, and where my synth can be streamlined or made more suitable for my practice. Perhaps more importantly, Jamuary’s extensive experimentation has given me the confidence to experiment further throughout the year, and not only when I can use the informal nature of Jamuary as an excuse to not be good at something (yet). Being flawed is part of growth, and having the confidence to put out imperfect art is a major step forward.

Most people would argue that, when creating art, quality is more desirable than quantity. Under most circumstances I would absolutely agree. I and most others would rather hear one solid recording than 31 mediocre ones. With the rush of a demanding timetable, art can turn into dreaded “content.” The lifeless stuff demanded by an arbitrary schedule. But in the context of something like Jamuary, I feel that quantity is better. Jamuary is a time for proverbial rough drafts; sketches of ideas you’d like to pursue in your more artistic endeavors. It pushes you to create something everyday, and, as with any endeavor, practice begets competence. The more you do something, the better you get at it. I could actually sense my patching becoming more fluid during one Jamuary patch in particular. I built Jamuary 2518 almost completely from a schematic in my brain that I put together throughout the day while I was at work. The patching was quick and easy, and the entire session simply flowed freely. It wasn’t dissimilar to the feelings I had as a kid learning to play the trumpet.1 It’s a feeling of freedom, when you know what you want to accomplish, and can do so forthwith. The sense that you’ve taken a step towards mastering your instrument.

But these lessons come at a cost. For example, I can only remember a fraction of my Jamuary patches. About one in three. Jamuary 2505, 2507, 2508, 2509, 2511, 2513, 2518, 2522, 2526, and 2527 are particularly memorable, even if I couldn’t identify which is which from memory. Most of my recordings this month have melded into an amalgamated mass in my head. I generally document most of my patches thoroughly both here and even more in depth in a Notability notebook I’ve kept for years. But with the rush and severe time constraints imposed by Jamuary I haven’t had the time to document more than short synopses, if that much, which I’m hoping doesn’t come to bite me down the road while trying to perform a technique that I only have scattered notes on. Part of the reason for not writing as much is the extreme time constraints Jamuary imposes, particularly in the context of real life. Another reason is that I’m exhausted. Once I’m done with my day, then create and record a patch, I scarcely have the energy or drive to write much and document more thoroughly. During a normal month with a normal patch, I might use a couple of weeks to patch, tweak, and record a track, taking copious notes along the way. I might take another week writing about it. It’s a much more open-ended way of working that allows for reflection and improvement to better service the patch and accompanying post explaining it. Jamuary doesn’t provide for such luxuries.

Despite its taxing nature full of compromises, however, participating fully in Jamuary has been a highly rewarding experience. Not just in my own patching, but in my daily interactions with people from all over the world. To hear their daily creations has been as fruitful as making my own. On several occasions this Jamuary I was inspired by someone else’s recording, or by someone’s comments about mine, pushing me towards trying something new. Unlike every other Jamuary participant, I’ve posted my recordings exclusively on peaks and nulls (though there is another brave blogger who has used his own site too, even if with the help of SoundCloud). Most use some form of social media. Instagram or YouTube, mostly. As a result, I’ve certainly had a smaller audience than I might have had I chosen to use social media. But even with that choice, I’ve had visitors listen to and read about my Jamuary creations from every continent (except Antarctica). 42 countries in total, and while only sharing links to my daily Jamuary recordings in exactly two places, the Jamuary thread on lines, and DivKid’s Discord server, along with a couple of straggler links on Modwiggler or lines in specific threads, and all without help from The Algorithm. Though I may only get a fraction of listens that social media might otherwise provide, that I can still have an international audience by doing self-publication on my own blog where I have full control over how my music is presented only supports my choice to remain free of social media. Be the change you want to see.

My single most listened to Jamuary recording (throughout the month) was Jamuary 2505, with 88 visitors through February 1 . 2505 is one of the handful of patches this past month that I remember vividly. It was a patch that centered on the Verbos Polyphonic Envelope and Harmonic Oscillator, phasing different harmonics in and out of audibility. There was even a bonus patch that also incorporated Panharmonium and the Dradd(s). It’s one of the best patches I’ve made with my Verbos case, and is something I’ll return to in the months ahead. As late as the 25th, it was in a seemingly insurmountable lead with nearly five times the number of visitors than the next closest post. Then something happened. A couple of scattered links on Modwiggler started to bear fruit. 2525, a beautiful Marbles > Rings > Beads patch, was hit with over 20 visitors in just one day. The next day I made a really fun Make Noise jam, and sprinkled a link on lines. Within two days 2526 had half as many visitors as 2505, and by the end of the month, had just four fewer visitors. It’s amazing what can happen when you put links in good places.

It would be very hard for me to choose a favorite Jamuary patch. It’s like trying to choose a favorite child. All of them have highlights and deficiencies, and I’ve done patches in several styles. Jamuary creations are meant to be sketches made during an avalanche of creative output which makes attachment to any one near impossible. Like I mentioned earlier, there are some patches I don’t really remember much at all from memory. But I do have several highlight moments in several patches. Whether the result of some cool patching technique or trick I figured out to make something work as I wanted it to, a happy accident, or a bit of joy at how much fun I was having, there are many memorable bits throughout Jamuary. The “crickets” in 2506 where I channeled a patching technique I gleaned from Ras Thavas’s experiments. A eureka moment in 2505 while performing an ambient patch with my Verbos case. Another eureka moment in 2511 using the same technique, only patched manually (as opposed to having a module do much of the work) with my Make Noise synth. Stepping well outside my comfort zone by using midi sequencers and software instruments in 2507, and expanding that patch with the modular in 2508, and running with the idea in 2516, 2520, and 2521. The absolute surprise of the wonderful stereo field I had when using the Optotronics Lockhart Stereo Wavefolder in 2514. The smile I had on my face while shaking that ass performing 2526. The moment that the Bizarre Jezabel Quarté Mk2 clicked for me during 2515, and was later reinforced, it’s intoxicating crunch having caused a major pivot away from the initial plan in 2527. Getting to know the Spectraphon in several patches. The Gloop, particularly during my run through just before recording 2530. All of these moments have left lasting impressions and given me ideas for many patches to come.

Overall I can’t tell you how many discreet modules I’ve used this Jamuary. Going back through 31 days of module lists for collation isn’t really a task I’m interested in performing, even if I would like to know the answer. And outside of the AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer, ST Modular SVCA, and Knob Farm Ferry, which were used in every patch on the main synth, I don’t know which one was used most. My impression, however, is that the Frap Tools Falistri is likely in that conversation. Either as an envelope or a modulator, I felt like I used it in an over-represented number of patches, but such is the utility of good tools (no pun intended). The CuteLab Missed Opportunities seemed to find its way into most patches. My chain of Intellijel Amps was also used copiously, and in various ways. As bog standard VCAs, a mixer or mixers, and even a large mult, spreading various attenuated and/or modulated copies of a CV around the synth that controlled all modulation throughout a patch. The Dradd(s) and Veno-Echo made several appearances.

But it wasn’t just the sheer number of modules I used. Throughout Jamuary I explicitly sought to use several new-to-me modules, or modules that have gone underused for one reason or another. The Make Noise Spectraphon was the biggest highlight for me in this category. I’ve had it for a couple of months, but never installed it until just before I performed my first patch with it during 2511. After a handful of uses this Jamuary it has now become my favorite Make Noise oscillator, and I’ve only really scratched the surface with one mode. Other modules I finally got around to using for the first time were the Mannequins Just Friends, Verbos Voltage Multistage, Sequence Selector, and Polyphonic Envelope, Mutable Instruments Blades and Tides v2, Optotronics Stereo Lockhart Wavefolder, Vostok Instruments Asset, Nonlinearcircuits Helvetica Scenario and Let’s Get Fenestrated, 4ms Dual Looping Delay, Cutlasses Gloop, and of course the Disting NT. There are probably others.

There are also other modules I hadn’t used in some time. All of the Verbos case had been out of action being expanded for the better part of the last nine months before Jamuary. Ditto with the Mutable Instruments case. It had been more than a year since I used Rings and I can’t remember when I last used Data Bender before 2525. Ditto Kermit Mk3, which made a prominent appearance in 2506, and will surely make others throughout this year. I’ve also explored functionalities I haven’t used very much within modules that I regularly use. I finally got around to trying, however little, the wave shaping and wave folding abilities of the Frap Tools Brenso. Up until Jamuary I’d used Brenso sparingly, and only with the sine or triangle wave outputs. The four quadrant multiplier in Falistri and ModDemix got a fair amount of use for the first time as I explored ring modulation in various patches throughout Jamuary. Before now they’d only been used as regular VCAs. I also used Falistri fairly extensively as an oscillator, and will be doing that much more as I move to a quad Falistri system.

I, of course, also delved, for the first time, into using only midi and software instruments during several Jamuary recordings. I’ve certainly messed around with multisample instruments before, but it’s always been more of an “Oh, look. This is pretty cool, I guess” sort of experience. I’d open Decent Sampler, load in an instrument, play the built-in keyboard for a while, then close it back up while saying something like, “I should try doing this with the modular.” Well, this Jamuary I did, and I’m very glad I took that very unnerving first step. Some of my prettiest creations were a result of using the iPad environment. I greatly enjoyed the feeling of having created something different such that I’ve taken positive steps towards having more integration between hardware and software environments by getting a Befaco MIDI Thing v2 so that I might be able to use software sequencers, particularly the wonderful Alexandernaut Fugue Machine, with my synth.

Jamuary also had me realize the necessity of and how I rely on some functionalities. It has never been more clear to me how integral a stereo matrix mixer is to my patches. The AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer is used in every patch on the main synth. As my patching has become more involved and complicated, I’ve leaned on it more and more, to the point of realizing the four channels of I/O is just not enough. There were several patches throughout this Jamuary when I had to find workarounds for not having enough in the matrix. It’s prompted me to get the new Addac Systems Addac814 6×6 Stereo Matrix Mixer, an expandable system up to (and perhaps beyond) an 18×18 channel configuration. It’s bigger than the 018 (33hp vs 18hp), has odd hp (which is always awkward), and has a non-standard UI for a matrix mixer which will take some time getting used to, but the tradeoffs seem like the extra channels and potential expandability will be worth it. I’ve also realized just how much I like pinging. Whether filters or LPGs, pinging has become an important part of my patches. It’s my main way of imparting some sort of percussion-like sounds, and no single sound in Eurorack quite compares to the beautiful decay of a well tuned LPG, whether vactrol or otherwise.

Overall Jamuary was a blast. The challenge of creating a new patch everyday got my creative juices flowing, and I’m still in a very creative mode as I write this two patches post Jamuary’s conclusion. The sense of accomplishment has helped foster more confidence in my skills as a synthesist, and has only made me want to do more. I have a very positive sense of direction and drive towards more creation. That said, I’m not sure if I’ll fully participate next year or not. It’s likely to depend on my personal circumstances next year. Only time will tell.

To close this already long patch, I’ll leave you with a playlist of some of the highest of lights from this Jamuary.

  1. I ultimately played trumpet into college and was trained as an orchestral musician for a time. ↩︎

Jamuary 2531

I wanted to do something very different today. Throughout Jamuary I’ve done drones, rhythmic pieces that one might even dance to, as well as many other styles. I even have a classic Rings > Beads patch. It had been a long while since I played my 4ms case. I can recall the last patch I used it. It was a pretty cool patch featuring the Ensemble Oscillator (though not one I uploaded to peaks and nulls), and before that was a patch last February. I hadn’t touched it at all during this Jamuary; it was one of the two cases I hadn’t touched at all (the other was my Instruo case), and I wanted to hear those sweet, sweet wavetables again.

I had initially set out to duplicate my 4ms Wonderland patch. I really enjoyed that patch and wanted to see if I could do it again. The answer is probably, at least a close enough version of it, but I ran into the same problem I had when making it the first time. The output levels of the Spectral Multiband Resonator pings are so low as to need significant boosting. In order to get them in an audible range for humans, I needed to boost them by 20dB, then run them to another VCA to boost them yet more. All this boosting added significant noise. I’m sure it’s something I will lean into in the future (who doesn’t like a bit of noise?), but I wasn’t in the mood to deal with it for tonight. So I decided to use the Spherical Wavetable Navigator to trigger itself in LFO > VCA mode rather than drone in the background. I started it with no transposition or Spread, then slowly introduced modulation to both, along with the modulation present in the Browse, Latitude, WT Spread, and Depth parameters of the wavetables, constantly changing the timbre and voicing. This made the SWN go up and down minor scales, and have different arpeggio patterns.

The SWN was sent to the 4ms Dual Looping Delay, another first-use module this Jamuary. What a cool delay that I’ll definitely need to explore. In the process, I used the Industrial Music Electronics Malgorithm Mk2 in the feedback loop, often times a little too eagerly. I manually rode the input level to the Malgorithm. There was a sweet spot where I could get good crunch without starting to runaway with feedback. This crunched up some already fairly crunchy wavetables in a really nice way. The mix was sent to the output mixer for some reverb.

I also decided to have a second crack at the Cutlasses Gloop. Last night was loads of fun, even if the recording wasn’t perfect. What an excellent little instrument. I need to practice looping, especially when trying to use four different loops simultaneously. Looping slower or more sparse material is much easier. It’s definitely a performative skill I haven’t used much of in the past, and my meager skills show. There’s some unintended jumpiness as I tried to shorten and move the individual loops within the large loop. Though far more gracefully than yesterday’s debacle, the transition between the source and the looped recording was a little rough around the edges. I also made a boneheaded mistake with this track: I never put a reverb send on it in AUM (😬), so the only tails it had were the delays tails, which rode the edge of self-oscillation throughout the Gloop section due to giving slightly too much juice to the input level on Malgorithm. It’s better than nothing, but would have been better with reverb and not low-riding oscillation. This was not intentional. I likely mistook it for reverb, though I did know something wasn’t right.

The Shaped Dual EnvVCA and Dual EnvVCA performed all modulation in this patch. All of their outputs were modulating something. The Spread and Transpose on SWN, the Latitude, Longitude, and Depth on the SWN to navigate the wavetable sphere, as well as the Shape of two of the LFOs.

Modules Used:
4ms Spherical Wavetable Navigator
4ms Dual EnvVCA
4ms Shaped Dual EnvVCA
4ms Dual Looping Delay
Industrial Music Electronics Malgorithm Mk2
Cutlasses Gloop
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
Intellijel Amps
ST Modular SVCA
Knob Farm Ferry

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

Improvised and recorded in one take on iPad in AUM via the Expert Sleepers ES-9.

Jamuary 2530

I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do today. I initially settled on a simple piano into an occasionally reversed delay patch, but wanted more than this very Rings-into-Clouds-like aesthetic. If I wanted that today, I’d just use Rings-into-Beads. But there’s a new module I recently got, and it was kinda staring at me wide-eyed, asking “Can you play with me now?”, akin to a small boy begging his busy father for just a few minutes of time. Or something like that. Whatever.

I was set on buying the new Cutlasses Gloop the very first time I saw it. Gloop is a four head tape looper. Each head can be played simultaneously, in either direction at various speeds. Each head can play the entire loop or any snippet down to small grains. It’s a fantastic looper on paper. I received it a couple of weeks ago, but just hadn’t gotten around to playing it yet. Once I realized that I wanted to use Gloop today, the patch pivoted and started to take on a life of its own. But I made the unfortunate decision to still incorporate the whole reverse delay and Beads thing. It’s not that it sounds bad. It doesn’t. It sounds really nice, actually. But it doesn’t fit with the looper direction very well, and I didn’t have the courage to dump the work I’d already done. It added several unnecessary minutes to the recording, and because of a now fixed peculiarity in how the module operates,1 I flubbed the performance, and had to add more unnecessary time to the recording in order to get the settings right and get to looping. That doesn’t happen until over nine minutes into the recording. Such is Jamuary.

The patch isn’t terribly difficult, even if there’s a lot of patch cables. I patched four cycling functions from the Addac506 to Numberwang, adjusted the rise and fall range to something that produced a nice cadence of gates in the Disting NT. The same four functions went to the Vostok Instruments Asset where I attenuated and offset all four channels into specific ranges of notes so as not to overcrowd the sonic range by using attenuation only. These four signals were patched to the Disting NT CV inputs for the quantizer to voice everything in D minor.

The piano went to the stereo matrix mixer where it was sent to the Veno-Echo, Beads, and Gloop.

Veno-Echo provided the sumptuous delayed sounds, randomly triggered into reverse by End of Rise gate outs on the Addac506, via the CuteLab Missed Opportunities, with a low probability of allowing the gate through.

Beads was set to have medium length grains with a sharper envelope, the buffer being slowly scanned at one octave up. The Beads output was sent directly to the mixer for multitracking.

One unfortunate fact of looping more or less randomly generated parts is that you get what you get. Sometimes, like during my first run-through, you’re able to capture a really good loop. Something you can work with. But other times, you’re not left with much, and you kind of need to eat your own dog food and pretend it tastes great. Such is this recording, I think. It’s not offensive. Not by a long shot. But had this been a take for anything other than Jamuary, I would have re-done it (as well as jettisoned other parts). Looping can be inspiring when you have a good loop. But it can feel like work when you have to search around for good looping points.

I completely neglected to snap any pics of this patch, which is a shame. Next time. And I’ll definitely be revisiting Gloop very soon.

Modules Used:
Addac Systems Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator
Nonlinearcircuits Numberwang
Expert Sleepers Disting NT
Vostok Instruments Asset
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
CuteLab Missed Opportunities
Venus Instruments Veno-Echo
Mutable Instruments Beads
Cutlasses Gloop
Knob Farm Ferry
ST Modular SVCA
Intellijel Quad VCA

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

  1. This behavior has been fixed in the newest firmware, but I haven’t installed it yet. When you cleared a loop, all tape head settings would revert to the default. I didn’t realize it until I was in the midst of performing the patch. ↩︎

Jamuary 2529

Hitting record before midnight counts.

A completely ripped off note progression (E, F#, G#, B) from Alessandro Cortini’s piece titled ERA on the Make Noise Records release Strega Musica.

0-Control fed the pitch sequence to Strega, which Strega-fied it. Strega’s triangle wave output was copied and patched to channels one and two of QMMG for some low pass filtering, with slightly different cutoff frequencies and differently attenuated modulation to helped create a stereo effect in the note progression. I first tried feeding it through QPAS, but it simply didn’t sound very good.

The blip bloops were a failed experiment. I was hoping for sporadic, sparkly bits that would ornament the droning note sequence, but it ended up not really at all what I’d hoped. Jamuary inherently comes with struggles, and sometime the time demands that you push record, ready or not. I probably should have had those notes be simple sine or triangle waves from Spectraphon. Instead I tried to be cute by using the even and odd mixed outputs with some heavy handed modulation to Slide and Focus on both sides. It didn’t really work. It exists, and juxtaposes itself against the dark drone, but that’s about it. I added to the confusion by using the Sample and Hold feature to control both the X and Y channels of René,, and haphazardly at that.

Well call today’s patch…a Time/Filter Experiment gone wrong.

Modules Used:
0-Control
Strega
René Mk2
Tempi
Spectraphon
ModDemix
Function
QMMG
DXG
Maths
Wogglebug
ModDemix
Mimeophon

Improvised and recorded in one take on iPad in AUM via the Expert Sleepers ES-9.

Jamuary 2528

Long day at work so this will be a quick and dirty patch notes….

The Make Noise system has my back again.

QPAS pinging away. Sequenced and pinged by René. Smile Pass and Bandpass outputs both sent to X-Pan and crossfaded, although I don’t know there’s much difference between them in the output. Spectraphon supplied both ring modulated and FM tones. For FM tones, Spectraphon A is on left, Spectraphon B on right. They are tuned an octave apart. Both mixes enveloped by a Fall modulated Maths functions in DXG.

Both QPAS and Spectraphon had every CV input modulated by…something. Wogglebug, René, Maths, Tempi, Maths Functions, the OR and SUM outputs on Maths, and just about anything else I could find.

Everything mixed in DXG and sent to Mimeophon for some delay and a decent amount of Halo. Had a little too much fun using the 0-Coast Slope output to modulate Mimeophon’s uTime CV input.

Kick was created by the 0-Coast. A steady clock from Tempi triggered the Contour on the 0-Coast. The Contour output was attenuated and sent to the v/oct input to give the kick some punch. The kick is dry in the mix.

Modules Used:
René Mk2
Tempi
Spectraphon
ModDemix
Function
QPAS
Maths
Wogglebug
X-Pan
Mimeophon
0-Coast

Improvised and recorded in one take on iPad in AUM via the Expert Sleepers ES-9.

Jamuary 2527

When I set out to do today’s Jamuary patch I had initially planned on recreating, at least in spirit, a patch I did as a test for a travel synth during the summer. After setting up the piano portion of the patch, I changed my mind and decided against creating a sub bass sequence, or indeed using any distortion as I did in that patch. In part was because I was highly taken aback when, instead of plugging the piano output into the Qu-Bit Nautilus, as I did in that patch, I reached for the extremely lo-fi Bizarre Jezabel Quarté Mk2. The natural decay of the delay was plenty dirty in all the best of ways, and decided to go with it instead of introducing some other form of distortion. From there the patch went a very different direction. Rather than a sad yet hopeful tenor, this one is just sad.

For this patch I decided to use Stochaos as my gate producer for triggering the piano sounds, being fed by a chaotically controlled clock. I’m a fan of using chaos as a clock source. I’ve used multiple methods of using chaos to create off beat rhythms, from using Numberwang to running a chaos signal through Divide & Conquer, a clock divider than can use any signal as a clock input. Today I used, for the first time, the Nonlinearcircuits Let’s Get Fenestrated, a comparator NLC-style, fed by a heavily modulated The Hypster. This process created a perfectly ultra-wonky clock, which then fed Stochaos. Stochaos spat out four gates at the Disting NT inputs which triggered both the quantizer and the Poly Multisample player.

The audio was sent to the AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer, and on to the Bizarre Jezabel Quarté Mk2 for some soul-crushingly beautiful repeats that seem to disintegrate as they decay away. I seriously contemplated just leaving the patch at that, adding in some reverb, and calling it a day, but I knew that I could add to it subtly and give it some more life. To give it some other textures to contemplate and heighten the overall mood of the piece without distracting too much from the piano and those beautiful repeats.

I started with the Qu-Bit Electronix Data Bender, but I knew I only wanted to use that sparingly and didn’t think it would add enough by itself, so opted also to send the piano notes to the Dradd(s) for some good old fashioned time stretching. This was perfect and even allowed me to use the Data Bender even more sparingly so as not to overwhelm the Piano with failure. I slowly controlled the Data Bender output in the ST Modular SVCA with a modulated LFO from the Frap Tools Falistri. To modulate the length of the LFO I used an attenuated and slightly offset Smooth Random output from Sapel into the Both CV input. An inverted copy of the LFO was sent to a second SVCA which very slightly lowered the volume of the Piano and its repeats while the Data Bender did the thing.

The Dradd(s) add tons of texture with their medium-to-short grains, re-creating the piano at a slow crawl, filling in space and adding a layer of intrigue. Like a splash in water, the Dradd(s) created a distorted view of what’s underneath: slivers of sound overlapping and rippling off each other in a beautiful chorus. I’m still infatuated with the dual Dradd(s). I’ve used lots of granular processors in Eurorack. Of the continuous processing type, those that don’t rely on pre-recording to a buffer, but instead have a continuous buffer and don’t require recording a certain bit of material to process, I have a very difficult time choosing between the Dradd(s) and the Mutable Instruments Beads. It seems like I can always find something fascinating. That I can always use it to find something beautiful inside of the audio itself.

Modules Used:
Nonlinearcircuits The Hypster
Nonlinearcircuits Let’s Get Fenestrated
Nonlinearcircuits Stochaos
Nonlinearcircuits De-Escalate
Expert Sleepers Disting NT
Bizarre Jezabel Quarté Mk2
Qu-Bit Electronix Data Bender
Pladask Elektrisk Dradd(s)
Frap Tools Falistri
Frap Tools Sapél
Vostok Instruments Asset
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
ST Modular SVCA
Intellijel Quad VCA
Knob Farm Ferry

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

Improvised and recorded in one take on iPad in AUM via the Expert Sleepers ES-9.


Jamuary 2526

I love my Make Noise synth. No matter my mood, I can always count on my Make Noise box to provide for some serious fun. The instrument is simply sublime. It’s quick, intuitive, and a breeze to perform with. Tony and crew have really done a bang-up job not only designing each module, but in making sure they fit seamlessly together as a cohesive instrument. Of course there are some modules that I have strong opinions about, but rarely do those issues inhibit creativity.

Tonight’s patch was an improvised jam. It was a long day at work and I had just under two hours to get a patch together, work out the modulation, figure some flow for the performance, however meager, and record it. Two hours is about the least amount of time I can generally create a patch from scratch, though I’ve noticed throughout this Jamuary that I am getting faster, but with the Make Noise synth I figured I’d hit record before midnight. Today I had some time to spare.

The patch is pretty involved. Every sound except the kick drum, which is STO, was generated from Spectraphon. I used both sine waves from Spectraphon to ring modulate each other in my very cool orange LED ModDemix. One copy is sent to the L channel of DXG, the other the right channel (both with dummy cables in the unused channel to preserve the stereo field), each triggered in their respective Strike inputs by René’s X and Y channel. Both sides of Spectraphon received pitch CV from the X channel. This created a really cool stereo field with the molody’s rhythm jumping back and forth in your ear, constantly changing as I improvised on René.

The second voice is where it gets a bit complicated. It was made from Spectraphon’s B side Odd and Even outputs, triggered in QMMG by using René’s Cartesian channel gate. The B side Focus is sequenced by the Y channel, and Slide was sequenced by the Cartesian channel. Varying levels of Wogglebug’s Stepped output modulated the B side Partials, as well as the B side FM Bus Index. There’s a lot of movement in this voice, but it’s always harmonically related to the first voice. Partials flying around, FM being heavily modulated, both affecting the sound of different from each output.1 After being gated in QMMG. I sent a mix of the modulated Odd and Even signal to X-Pan to be panned back and forth in the stereo field.

Everything is mixed together in DXG and sent to Mimeophon for delay and a hint of Halo.

The kick is made using STO. A x1 gate from Tempi triggered Function which provided an envelope in X-Pan’s Aux input, I polarized Function’s negative output in Maths, in order to make it positive again, and used that to FM STO to give the kick a little more punch.

This patch was really fun to make and perform. I was shaking my skinny little ass all over the joint. As a kid from the 80s, that’s the measuring stick for a good time.

Modules Used:
René Mk2
Tempi
STO
QMMG
Spectraphon
ModDemix
Function
QPAS
Maths
Wogglebug
X-Pan
Mimeophon

Improvised and recorded in one take on iPad in AUM via the Expert Sleepers ES-9.

  1. It occurred to me as I was writing this that I could have simply used the mixed output from Spectraphon rather than mixing them later. It would have also enabled me to not have to run the kick through the delay. ↩︎

Jamuary 2525

Today’s Jamuary is not only a classic patch, it’s a meme in the modular world. With a small twist. That’s right, it’s Marbles > Rings > Beads. Although the true classic is Rings > Clouds, Beads is a fine substitute. I haven’t used any of my Mutable Instruments modules in a long time. I removed that case from the synth a few months ago in order to expand it, and while I was filling it up, it went completely unused. It’s one of the downsides of having a modular modular synth. There’s always something missing. Beads had been a staple in many of my patches until I pulled it out. To the MI case I added several choice modules. Blades, Stages, Tides v2, and am still in the process of adding one last module before the case will be complete. But I decided that today I’d do a patch I haven’t done in a very long time.

Rings into Clouds is a eurorack gateway drug. It’s a patch that many of us try at least once, and for good reason. Some people never venture any further and come up with something new every time. Such is the depth of this venerable duo. But Beads, although borne of, is not Clouds. You can do many similar things, but they are each their own instrument. Like so many Rings > Clouds patches before, this Rings > Beads patch all started with Marbles, and wonderfully musical random CV and gate generator, spitting out random CV to Rings’ v/oct input. With Rings a gate or trigger isn’t necessary. It detects changes in incoming CV and automatically generates notes when the CV has sufficiently changed. It’s a brilliant design, and dead simple to use. It’s no wonder why Rings is one of the first modules so many of us try. I know it was one of my first modules, and despite having other methods of producing the same sounds,1 it will never leave my synth. You needn’t know any fancy synthesis techniques to get incredibly beautiful sounds right out of the gate. Marbles was set to a moderately slow tempo with lots of jitter as to not become regular, and off we went. Set in Sympathetic Strings mode, Rings was left completely unmodulated. As Rings received new pitch information it sent notes to the venerable (and infamous) Beads, Mutable Instruments’ final module before closing shop in 2022.2

I’ve had Beads since its initial release. I’m one of those lucky enough to have been able to get one, as after the second batch was shipped a few months later, all production stopped, prices soared, and for a while became unobtainium. It took me a while, perhaps a year, to come to grips with Beads. The first couple of patches were a cacophony of grains overtaking everything else in the patch. It was messy, unruly, and I couldn’t figure out how to tame it. So I set it aside for a while. Once I became more familiar with the building blocks of granular synthesis (and synthesis in general) and how they worked in concert, I gave it another try and was bewildered by its beauty. Ever since then I’ve been hooked, and it’s become a tool that would be almost inconceivable to lose.

In this patch Beads was set to a moderately low number of randomly generated grains, while fairly heavily modulating Time, scanning the recording buffer, Shape, changing the composition of each grain, and Size from small to moderately large. This modulation allowed grains that were quite plucky to much longer “slides” through the buffer. Long grains can be a very interesting sound, and one I’ve explored some, but will seek to experiment with more in the future. The Quality setting is in Scorched Cassette mode, both for the longer buffer, as well as the saturated goodness it imparts on the audio. A little bit of blowout and compression goes a long way.

Once out of Beads, the audio went to Blades for some light, somewhere-between -Bandpass-and-High Pass Filtering, and the very slightest bit of Drive. Blades is new-to-me module I haven’t used before this patch, and now that the MI case is back in action, I’ll definitely be using it much more.

The bass drone is courtesy of Plaits playing what amounts to a very (very) lightly FM’d sine wave, with some modulation only to the Morph CV input to give it a small bit of motion so as not to become stale. I have no idea what note it is that’s droning away. I simply tuned it to the Rings output by ear and called it a day.

All modulation throughout the patch was done by Tides v2. This was also my first time using Tides, so I have no idea what mode it was in, or generally how it functions. What I do know is that I managed to get a quad of slow LFOs that are all phasing in and out of each other. I’ll have to read the manual to get a better idea of how it works, but it’s hard to mess up slow modulation sources too badly. One frustrating instance during making this patch was that although I had installed Stages in the case as part of the expansion, I hadn’t actually plugged it in. So despite desiring more modulation, I didn’t have access to any inside the MI case other than Tides, and so opted to not use any more modulation at all. I wanted as much as possible done only with this case, only using other modules for getting from the case to the interface.

With one exception.

One module I’ve also had for a very long time is the Qu-Bit Electronix Data Bender. Along with Rings (and Typhoon, one of the many versions of Clouds), it was one of the very first Eurorack modules I bought once I was bit by the bug. I used it a bunch initially to learn how, even if I’ve forgotten most of it after a few years, but haven’t really touched it since, generally favoring granular synthesis for glitchiness. Data Bender has a very unique sound. It’s the sound of failure. CD skipping, digital buffer errors, tape malfunctions, bit and sample reduction, and any other sort of audio failure, analog and/or digital, you can imagine. I’ve tended to enjoy its take on digital errors when I’ve used it and when I hear it in other people’s work. A sort of glitchiness that harkens back to the earliest days of my musical awakening as an adolescent as I was forming my own aesthetic in music. The days of CD players in the 80s that would skip if you farted across the room, and the multitude of buffering errors in the newly emerging internet through players like WinAmp were commonplace. Data Bender makes that failure musical. I would have thought that two different forms of glitch, from Beads and Data Bender might have been too much. But the effects were sufficiently different that they complemented rather than competed against one another.

Modules Used:
Mutable Instruments Marbles
Mutable Instruments Rings
Mutable Instruments Beads
Mutable Instruments Blades
Mutable Instruments Plaits
Mutable Instruments Tides v2
Qu-Bit Electronix Data Bender
AI Synthesis 018 Matrix Mixer

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

  1. Since Rings, and all of the Mutable Instruments modules, have been open sourced, several variations have appeared from miniaturized versions like Rangoon and nanoRings, to the software being ported to multifunction modules like the Expert Sleepers Disting Ex and NT. ↩︎
  2. Emilie Gillet, the former head of Mutable Instruments, is said to have created Beads in order to address “flaws” in how most people seemed to use Clouds, or to correct perceived shortcomings in how Clouds functioned. Although it took nearly three years after Clouds’ discontinuation to finally release Beads and was highly anticipated, it initially had a mixed reception. Now it’s the only Mutable Instruments module that hasn’t been released to open source. ↩︎

Jamuary 2523

I haven’t felt as bad as I did today for a long while. I even called in sick to work, which is something I don’t generally do. It was hard to get motivated for Jamuary today, but, as usual, once I finally mustered the energy to turn the synth on, the rest of the world kind of melted away for a short time, even if today wasn’t destined to be a fully from-scratch patch.

Today’s Jamuary patch is a re-work of yesterday’s patch. My first inclination was to simply swap the effects on the piano and Panharmonium and call it a day, but the result wasn’t at all what I had in mind, so decided on using different effects entirely.

The base of today’s patch was exactly the same as yesterday. The four outputs from the Addac506 were split to Numberwang and Let’s Splosh, which sent gates and CV respectively to the Disting NT, which quantized the CV and passed it to the Poly Multisample algorithm that spat out audio.

The audio, via the AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer, was sent to the Venus Instruments Veno-Echo for some slow repeats that were occasionally triggered into reverse using spare gate outputs from Numberwang. Both the dry and repeated audio were sent to Panharmonium, set to an octave down. Panharmonium is a magical module. It can sometimes be hard to tame, but when you finally find that sweet spot in a given patch, it has the capacity like few other things to gracefully fill up space and create a floating bed of awesomeness. Panharmonium was sent to the Dradd(s) in Tape Mode, each side played 2x speed, one forward, the other in reverse, with just enough feedback to occasionally shimmer upwards another octave. I’ve been absolutely amazed with the sounds I’ve gotten with dual Dradd(s). Of the many GAS-induced purchases I’ve made in modular, a second Dradd is amongst the best of those decisions.

The Piano/Veno-Echo, Panharmonium, and Dradd(s) were all separately sent to the output mixer for some reverb in the always lovely Walrus Audio Slöer.

Modules Used:
Addac Systems Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator
Nonlinearcircuits Numberwang
Nonlinearcircuits Let’s Splosh
Nonlinearcircuits Divide & Conquer
Expert Sleepers Disting NT
Venus Instruments Veno-Echo
Rossum Electro-Music Panharmonium
Pladask Elektrisk Dradd(s)
Intellijel Amps
Frap Tools Falistri
Knob Farm Ferry
ST Modular SCVA

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

Jamuary 2522

Today was a much needed day off from work. After two long shifts in the cold, I was looking forward to taking my time while patching in my warm studio today. The last couple of days had been last minute jobs on the iPad, and I don’t like being rushed. The process was unsatisfying, and the outcome suffered. They’re not terrible sketches by any stretch, and absolutely gave me ideas for future use, but they just feel rickety and incomplete to me. Such is the nature of Jamuary.

As I was in the midst of discussion in a Discord earlier this afternoon, the conversation turned to the new 4ms MetaModule, a module capable of running VCV patches. A couple of others and I had chimed in voicing our preference for the also new Expert Sleepers Disting NT. I also mentioned that I needed to learn how to use the Disting NT, which set off a lightbulb moment. This is Jamuary, and I had planned to make a full modular patch today. I’d use this opportunity to learn better how to use the algorithm(s) which prompted the purchase in the first place, even if it can do so much more.

I have created a lot of patches over the last year that use the Disting Ex in Polyphonic Multisample mode. I love that mode, but the Disting Ex has a user interface only a mother could love. It has a lot of great features, but the screen is incredibly small which is tough on these almost-50 eyes, and the interface awkward. Each algorithm has a million options, and navigating to make changes is a hassle. So much so that I literally only ever used Disting Ex in Poly Multisample mode. The new NT promised a much bigger screen, a much friendlier interface, and that it could run several algorithms simultaneously. I wanted that superior interface, even if it couldn’t do anything more (which of course it can do a lot more). It’s totally possible to have a multi-voice patch complete with FX while only using output cables. It really is an incredible machine, but there is a learning curve. I wanted today to be about making my way up that curve, even if just a little bit.

I’ve only used the NT once. It was just before Christmas, and I had just received it. Between my brother and I, we were able to squeeze just a drop or two of juice from it (Day 2, Patch 2). I left frustrated, but not ready to give up on it, because that drop was sweet. But today was a bit different. Shortly before getting ready to patch, I watched an introductory video for the NT to see if I could find my bearings a bit, and learn better how to navigate it, and how to leverage using more than one algorithm at a time. After firing up the synth, I immediately starting digging through menus and setting up a simple patch, but with a twist. I would only run a quantizer into the Poly Multisample algorithm, but rather than a single gate and cv source, I would use four pairs of gates and CV, all to be quantized, and then sent via Aux busses inside the NT to the Poly Multisample which was set up to receive the quad set. Though programming wasn’t completely smooth, it went easy enough, and once I stumbled in the menus a couple of times, navigation eased, and programming came together exactly like I’d hoped without a hitch.

The patch started with four cycling functions from the Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator. The outputs were split and sent to both the Nonlinearcircuits Numberwang for gate generation, and Let’s Splosh for pitch CV. Four outputs from each went to Disting NT, with the CV being attenuated and offset with the Vostok Instruments Asset to varying degrees before going to the input pairs. Once the signals reached Disting, they were quantized into C minor, and passed on to the LABS Soft Piano sample library, before coming out of stereo outputs and directly into the AI 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer.

From the mixer, the Soft Piano audio was sent to the Holocene Electronics Non-Linear Memory Machine. Set at a medium slow delay time, the freeze section was gated and modulated by a cycling function from the Frap Tools Falistri. The End Of Cycle trigger turned the Freeze on and off, while a clock divided (/2) version of that trigger gated the function itself, which scanned the buffer for some granular-like sounds. The clock-divided trigger also gated an offset signal that switched the output to an octave up while the buffer was scanning. This part of the patch was tricky. I tried several different methods before I made a realization about the nature of the gate I was using to trigger freeze and scan the buffer. Because it was the End of Cycle output and the function had not yet started, it was already high, and on the first count in the clock divider. Once I started the cycle, the cycling function and resulting trigger, a simple /2 output of Divide & Conquer worked perfectly to keep the freeze function, scanning, and offset to the octave up in sync. The result is almost Data Bender-like in the best of ways.

In order to fill in some space between the sparse piano notes being played, I sent both the piano and NLMM to the Rossum Electro-Music Panharmonium, which went through the Venus Instruments Veno-Echo at about a 50/50 mix. I set unsync’d, medium-long delay times on each channel, and allowed it to bring some motion to Panharmonium before going to the output mixer.

Everything went through the always lovely Walrus Audio Slöer for some thickly modulated reverb.

Modules Used:
Addac Systems Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator
Nonlinearcircuits Numberwang
Nonlinearcircuits Let’s Splosh
Nonlinearcircuits Divide & Conquer
Vostok Instruments Asset
Expert Sleepers Disting NT
Holocene Electronics Non-Linear Memory Machine
Rossum Electro-Music Panharmonium
Venus Instruments Veno-Echo
Intellijel Amps
Frap Tools Falistri
Knob Farm Ferry
ST Modular SCVA

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

Improvised and recorded in 1 take on iPad in AUM via the Expert Sleepers ES-9.

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