Jamuary 2509

Today I decided to go back to a technique I’ve rarely used, and on a much grander scale. I don’t use noise very often, and when I do it tends to be for the obvious use cases. Hit hats, wind and ocean sounds, sprays, etc. I seldomly use it for modulation, and only once have I used noise of any flavor to amplitude modulate an oscillators wave. Today I would do it again, times eight.

I conceived of using noise to modulate all eight harmonics of the Verbos Harmonic Oscillator this morning as my wife was talking to me. I even popped up a bit at the idea, and she took notice.

Wife: “What?”

Me: “Nothing. Just had a thought occur to me. Not even sure if it’s worth a shit.”

I spent the better part of the morning and early afternoon thinking about how I wanted to do this patch. I knew that just noise into each harmonic’s VCA wasn’t it. Then it occurred to me: Chaos! As soon as this though hit my brain I knew what to do, and immediately went to the synth to start patching.

I ran blue noise from Sapel to input 1 of the Intellijel Amps. Amps is a special sort of VCA. Everything cascades. All inputs cascade, as do CV inputs, and there are mixing outputs as well. It’s incredibly flexible. I have four of them chained together to be an eight channel “super VCA/submixer” and it’s been a great choice. Since each input cascades, I only needed one noise input to run this entire section of the patch. Every other channel received that same blue noise input as well. Into each channel’s CV input I patched one of the eight outputs from Nonlinearcircuits The Hypster to chaotically modulate the noise levels of all eight channels independently. Once that was patched, I ran each Amps output to its own Harmonic Oscillator VCA input at random. The only part of this patch that was planned were the first and fifth harmonics, which received their noise modulation from the U and -U outputs on The Hypster as they’re the outputs with the highest amplitude. Each harmonic was slowly brought in by slowly adjusting each CV attenuator individually at random until they were all playing. The nature of chaos means that cycles, even if semi-regular at times, don’t repeat exactly the same, and the harmonics never played the same twice, which kept movement interesting. There were often pauses or redirections in motion for each harmonic. Wonderful.

The mixed HO output was patched to the Multi-Delay Processor. I’ve been taken in by the earthy sound of the Harmonic Oscillator. Each harmonic sine wave has a little hair on it once you give them a little push. The drive in the MultixDelay Processor, both on the input and on each tap output, accentuates that hair in all the right ways. This Verbos ecosystem is warm and inviting, but it can also roar. Taps four and eight were patched to the Verbos Scan & Pan, hard panned left and right, and the output of the MDP, which only had the dry signal, was patched to be in the middle of the mix. This mix created a strong signal with some subtle stereo movement which ended up being fantastic. This stereo signal was then patched to the stereo matrix mixer to be spread around to different effects.

The Rossum Panharmonium fed the Holocene Electronics Non-Linear Memory Machine, which was set with a fairly slow delay and full clockwise smearing, which really smoothed out the Panharmonium’s output for an accompanying drone that floats along beside the ever moving Harmonic Oscillator. This output then fed the Dradd(s), which did its thing in Grain Mode (although I think I forgot to turn on the modulation to both P1 and P2 on both Dradds 😬 – I’m also not convinced it isn’t lost in the mix).

I’m very pleased with how this patch turned out and was a great success at using this technique which I’ll be sure to use more often.

Modules Used:
Nonlinearcircuits The Hypster
Nonlinearcircuits Triple Sloths
Intellijel Amps
Frap Tools Sapel
Verbos Harmonic Oscillator
Verbos Multi-Delay Processor
Verbos Scan & Pan
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
Rossum Electro-Music Panharmonium
Holocene Electronics Non-Linear Memory Machine
Pladask Elektrisk Dradd(s)
Knob Farm Ferry

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

Plugins Used:
Toneboosters TB Equalizer

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

Jamuary 2505 – Two Versions

I was always sure that a Verbos system could do ambient, but it’s not what I read in their brand identity. Mark Verbos, the owner of Verbos, has noted several times in interviews that his main inspiration in both making music and instruments is his love for techno. The sounds his instruments make are raw, and there doesn’t seem a clear path to ambient paradise when I look at Verbos module faceplates. But in an interview I recently watched, Verbos mentioned that one of the first questions he was asked when the Harmonic Oscillator was whether it can do ambient drones, something he hadn’t considered at all when he was designing it. Nearly a decade later we know Verbos systems can used to perform ambient music, but it wasn’t until today, after a couple of days using sequencers and rhythms, that I finally decided to see what I could do.

The patch began with the Polyphonic Envelope, each of the four outputs to a different harmonic of the Harmonic Oscillator, with the All output patched to the fundamental. In a new technique for me, I decided to use blue noise from Sapel as an amplitude modulator for the fifth harmonic, which ended up being fantastic. I followed that up with very short, randomly generated pings to the eighth harmonic. As a means to more beef, I also frequency modulated the HO with its own second harmonic. The Mixed output of the HO was sent first through Amp & Tone for a bit of conditioning and resonance before going to the Multi-Delay Processor. The MDP was set to output the dry signal and some volume level delay taps, while I patched four separate individual delay tap outputs to the Scan & Pan for stereo-ification.

After some fuddling around with the Polyphonic Envelope, I finally got to a nice flow of envelopes, each triggered once the decay stage of the previous envelope begins in a beautiful cascade that cycles over and over. After a bit of figuring out some movement for the patch, I decided it was ready to record. Only this time, I decided on using some final reverb, my every trusty Walrus Audio Slöer, instead of relying solely on the reverb from the MDP. This was a great choice.

Having recorded the patch and still wanting more, I decided to process the Verbos voice through the Panharmonium (crossfaded saw waves) > the Bizarre Jezabel Pkhia, as well as the Dradd(s) to add some movement and edge, and recorded it again, so today we get another bonus patch.

I’m quite happy with how this patch turned out. This is definitely a route I’ll be exploring more in depth this year.

Modules Used:
Verbos Polyphonic Envelope
Verbos Harmonic Oscillator
Verbos Amp & Tone
Verbos Multi-Delay Processor
Verbos Scan & Pan
Verbos Voltage Multistage
Frap Tools Sapel
Frap Tools Falistri
Intellijel Amps
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
Knob Farm Ferry
Rossum Electro-Music Panharmonium
Bizarre Jezabel Pkhia
Addac Systems Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator
Pladask Elektrisk Dradd(s)

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

Jamuary 2504

Today’s patch was a further exploration and curating of yesterday’s Verbos patch, with help from a couple of West Coast-y friends, Frap Tools Sapel, Brenso, and Falistri. Brenso played a pivotal support role in adding texture by supplying amplitude modulation via a triangle wave to Harmonic Oscillator’s Fundamental and the Final output to the Fifth Harmonic. Brenso’s wavefolder and wave shaper were triggered and modulated by Sapel. Harmonic Oscillator was the only sound source, being modulated by Voltage Multistage and Polyphonic Envelope. The mixed output went to Multi-Delay Processor. The saw wave was patched to Amp & Tone. It started out being pinged in LPG mode, before plugging in frequency modulation of the cutoff from Sequence Selector. Two of the MDP individual tap outputs (four and eight) are patched to Scan & Pan and hard panned left and right for some ping-pong action.

Modules Used:
Verbos Harmonic Oscillator
Verbos Multi-Delay Processor
Verbos Voltage Multistage
Verbos Sequence Selector
Verbos Polyphonic Envelope
Verbos Amp & Tone
Verbos Scan & Pan
Frap Tools Brenso
Frap Tools Sapel
Frap Tools Falistri
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer

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

Jamuary 2503

Like yesterday, this patch was also inspired by Stazma’s Verbos Harmonic Oscillator demo. I’m not really experienced with much of this Verbos case, so it’s a very rough draft, but a direction that I’m very much enjoying. The tone and texture of the Verbos ecosystem is intoxicating. Enough that’s it’s giving me some bad ideas….

Modules Used:
Verbos Harmonic Oscillator
Verbos Multi-Delay Processor
Verbos Scan & Pan
Verbos Voltage Multistage
Verbos Polyphonic Envelope
Verbos Amp&Tone
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer

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

Jamuary 2502 – Two Versions

I’ve had the Verbos Harmonic Oscillator and Multi-Delay Processor for a little over a year. My very first Jamuary patch ever used it. But as I was adding to my Verbos case over much of this last year, the HO and Co. went unused. I decided I want to change that, and so I did.

This patch is loosely based on a video by Stazma (AKA The Junglechrist), though there are certainly plenty of changes. It’s not a difficult patch, but the resulting audio is compelling. The amount of drive and saturation is wonderful.

Version 1

It’s starts with two smooth random voltages from the Frap Tools Sapel into the Fundamental and Fifth Harmonic to create a base drone. The random is constantly fluctuating, so the levels of those notes are a bit unstable. It follows with a very short, attenuated envelope triggered by the random triggers from Sapel in the Sixth Harmonic, and then again by another very short envelope into the Spectral Tilt CV input. The Final mixed output of the Harmonics is patched to the input of the Multi-Delay Processor, and straight to the output mixer.

Four of the Harmonic outputs from the HO (the Third, Fourth, Seventh, and Eighth) are patched to the Verbos Scan & Pan. It’s here that each harmonic is played, rather than directly on the HO interface. The harmonics panned, and sent to the second input on the Multi-Delay Processor for some of that saturated delay goodness.

Version 2

This version doesn’t change too much, but the changes are fundamental. I’m working on “stereo-fying” mono gear, and Verbos gives us a great way to do that with the Scan & Pan. Rather than patching harmonics from the HO to the Scan & Pan, I used four of the delay taps, (Five, Six, Seven, and Eight) and hard panned taps five and seven left, with taps six and eight panned right. The HO output and Scan & Pan outputs are patched straight to the mixer.

This change was great for the stereo-fication of the Harmonic Oscillator, but at the expense of drive. The dry signal has little or no drive outside of the saturated sines from each harmonic, with the delayed signal supplying it all. It does admittedly help with clarity. Next time I’ll run the output from the MDP to the mixer with only the Dry signal on the mixed output, which should give me back the drive I’m after.

Modules Used:
Verbos Harmonic Oscillator
Verbos Multi-Delay Processor
Verbos Scan & Pan
Verbos Polyphonic Envelope
Frap Tools Sapel
Frap Tools Falistri
Frap Tools 333
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer

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

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