Jamuary 2515

Today’s Jamuary was hard. I’m tired, and I made the fatal mistake of waiting until the last minute. The result isn’t bad. I actually like it, even if I’d make changes in a future revision. But in the spirit of using some unfamiliar gear during Jamuary, I ran into unfamiliar problems. I couldn’t find a filter I liked, had a hard time choosing delays, and had to patch and re-patch several times, only to arrive at a fairly simple audio chain and control scheme. I made dumb mistakes that hampered the effort and made it much more difficult than it should be.

Jamuary 2513 and 2514 were both rhythmic driven patches, and cool as they were, I was ready for something slow today. Up in the top right corner of my synth (as it’s currently configured) sits the revered Mannequins Just Friends. I haven’t had it too long, perhaps three or four months, but I hadn’t had the occasion to use it yet and I figured there’s no better time than right now to pop that particular cherry. Though I know Just Friends is many things, including a harmonic oscillator, I wanted to try its modulation capabilities during my premier with it. From all reports, it’s utterly fantastic in that role. So I set it at a slow yet still moving Time, and let it loose. The Hypster, via De-Escalate, modulated both Intone and Curve to keep the movement of each function in constant flux.

I thought about using virtually every multi-oscillator module I had. The E370, Falistri(s), 4Vox, CUNSA, Harmonic Oscillator, Quad Operator, and several others. But for some reason, I settled on using a Calsynth Changes, a very excellent 1:1 Mutable Instruments Stages clone, in Harmonic Oscillator (AKA Ouroboros mode). It’s not really a conventional choice for use as an oscillator, though it does the job great, and has the added benefit of having exactly six oscillators with six shapes (I used triangle waves), conveniently matching the six outputs of Just Friends.

Initially I tried to control the levels of each oscillator directly on Changes, but it doesn’t work great that way, so I opted to patch each output to a individual VCAs to be modulated by Just Friends, with the odd harmonics left and the even harmonics right. The output goes directly to the Bizarre Jezabel Mimosa, then Quarté Mk2 for a bit of lo-fi-ification. I had two looping triangle envelopes modulating time on both delay channels for some vibrato (even if I couldn’t hone in the modulation to my satisfaction), and, as the performance progressed, fed a slow looping stochastic function from the Addac506 to Mimosa’s wet/dry CV input. The noisy delay made Mimosa superfluous in some ways, but the effect is still nice, though probably not necessary, especially since I was also overdriving the VCAs with hot envelopes and, for much of the performance, with the attenuator wide open.

As a last minute addition, I also added a send to the Dradd brothers (in Grain mode) for some more gritty texture. This patch is full of texture. I tried to send the Dradd(s) through a delay, but couldn’t find one I liked quickly enough, and so abandoned the idea and ran it straight to the mixer for some reverb treatment.

The result is a pretty epic drone, perhaps a bit reminiscent of Alessandro Cortini (if I may be so bold), especially with the signature noisy PT2399 sound from the delay chips.

Modules Used:
Mannequins Just Friends
Calsynth Changes
Bizarre Jezabel Mimosa
Bizarre Jezabel Quarté Mk2
Pladask Elektrisk Dradd(s)
Nonlinearcircuits The Hypster
Nonlinearcircuits De-Escalate
Intellijel Amps
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
Addac Systems Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator
Knob Farm Ferry

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

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

Jamuary 2501 – Music For People Who Hate Dancers

I don’t really hate dancers, even if this patch might make you think I do.

I don’t trend towards rhythm driven music set to a time grid very often. And even when I do aim to have a rhythmic patch, it’s almost always doing something to mess with time. Jamuary 2501 is no exception.

The first patch of this wonderful Jamuary 2025 started as a desire to use an old and new piece of gear. I bought the Bizarre Jezabel Quarté a couple of years ago when I ran into several Bizarre Jezabel modules for sale at a retail shop in Germany. Until then, the only way to purchase one was to go through a labyrinthine process (for an American) of ordering directly.1 But when I first bought Quarté I didn’t get along with it well at all. I couldn’t figure out how to control the LPG, and what I got was a mess. The controls were crammed, and I sold it forthright. But a few months back I got another hankering to try the Quarté. The PT2399 delay chips are legendary for their lo-fi character, and the quad nature of it as a LPG and delay is right up my current alley of interest. I went on Reverb and grabbed the first one at a decent price, only this one was the updated Quarté Mk2, with a new wet/mixed switch, and some very clever normalizing across channels. The Mk2 can be used in several output configurations, including stereo or quad mono. But the crunch of the delay is what this module is all about.

Quarté Mk2 is not hard to use, but it is difficult to maneuver. Small, unmarked trim pots in very bad places make wiggling a chore when cables are patched in, particular the “t” and “lpgi” trim knobs. The introduction of a wet/mixed switch (which is a 50/50 mix) is very nice. The vactrol-based LPGs sound good, but are quite aggressive, and with a fairly short tail. It’s not always the right sort of strike, which is why I opted to use a Natural gate to articulate notes in this patch, with the Quarté as a delay only.

Most of this patch is pretty simple. Two outputs from the Joranalogue Generate 3 were mixed together and sent to a Natural Gate. The sequence is derived from the Joranalogue Step 8. Both the Natural Gate and Step 8 are clocked by Pam’s Pro Workout, from separate outputs clocked at different rates. The kick was made by Ringing CUNSA, and the hats were blue noise from Sapel sent through a HPF (also CUNSA). Both were triggered by a x8 click output, via the CuteLab Missed Opportunities at increasing levels of probability.

But why is this music for people who hate dancers? It’s pretty groovy. It’s a good tempo for the nightclub. But there is a wrench. At some points, there was an envelope that ripped through the sequence, disrupting the timing and jolting the groove. It’s sudden and unapologetic. The sequence always got back on the grid quickly, but not always in the same spot it was before things were rudely interrupted. It’s jolting and not conducive at all for dancing. I’m sure I’d get thrown out of the club were I to play something like this.

Modules Used:
Joranalogue Step 8
Joranalogue Generate 3
Joranalogue Contour 1
Joranalogue Compare 2
Frap Tools 333
Frap Tools Sapel
Frap Tools Falistri
Frap Tools CUNSA
ALM Busy Circuits Pamela’s Pro Workout
CuteLab Missed Opportunities
Addac Systems Addac506 Stochastic Function Generator
Rabid Elephant Natural Gate
Bizarre Jezabel Quarté Mk2
AI Synthesis 018 Stereo Matrix Mixer
Xaoc Devices Samara II
Knob Farm Ferry

Outboard Gear Used:
Walrus Audio Slöer

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

  1. Payment required direct international wire transfers with no purchase protection, and expensive fees to execute. ↩︎
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