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unexplored sound territory
 

offline dingle berry from on a small plastic chair breat (Haiti) on 2008-03-11 06:03 [#02184045]
Points: 2389 Status: Regular




I know that there is definitely a lot of unexplored sound
territory, and that most electronic instruments are made to
satisfy some sort of consumer profile - an important part of
which is not to scare anybody off - so most commercial
instruments all do more or less the same thing.

why isnt there a mass produced synthesizer that includes
circuit bent type sounds? and glitch options?

maybe there is i haven't found it yet though!

anyone..........



 

offline pulseclock from Downtown 81 on 2008-03-11 06:22 [#02184047]
Points: 6015 Status: Lurker



thats whats so cool about it, it's kind of like the guitar
back in the day, people were trying so hard to get acoustic
guitars to become electrified, there was all sorts of crazy
inventions, then there became an electric guitar, i think
the same thing will happen, probably less noticeable though
and not much of a breathrough cause a synthesizer is already
electronic.


 

offline dingle berry from on a small plastic chair breat (Haiti) on 2008-03-11 06:56 [#02184050]
Points: 2389 Status: Regular



good answer dude!

im just desperate for some crunchy extremely low bit rate
glitchyness in a nice solid keyboard configuration!


 

offline jackeroffer from Aruba on 2008-03-11 10:13 [#02184132]
Points: 1038 Status: Lurker



the monomachine is probably the closest keyboarded
synthesizer to what you're looking for. its all digital
synthesis, but it can get some very gnarly glitch esque
sounds not at all of the generic analog variety


 

offline dingle berry from on a small plastic chair breat (Haiti) on 2008-03-11 10:30 [#02184138]
Points: 2389 Status: Regular



cheers jackeroffer, those sid chip c64 workstations are
pretty cool....

ive never seen any of these synths before thanks!


 

offline futureimage from buy FIR from Juno (United Kingdom) on 2008-03-11 10:56 [#02184146]
Points: 6427 Status: Lurker



Alesis Ion and a Monomachine would go down very well.
Add Elektron's Machinedrum to it and you're rocking.


 

offline wimp on 2008-03-11 12:34 [#02184180]
Points: 1389 Status: Lurker



try THE HUMAN VOICE


 

offline Spookyluke from United States on 2008-03-12 12:10 [#02184577]
Points: 1955 Status: Lurker



Or CSOUND! That's the cutting edge, man. CSOUND. Shew.


 

offline futureimage from buy FIR from Juno (United Kingdom) on 2008-03-12 12:19 [#02184579]
Points: 6427 Status: Lurker | Followup to Spookyluke: #02184577



....all I got out of Csound was a sine wave with a few
crackles over the top.


 

offline Spookyluke from United States on 2008-03-12 12:28 [#02184583]
Points: 1955 Status: Lurker



You can really rock and roll Csound once you get used to it.
I'm still just barely learning it, but you can use it even
to sample things in weird ways. I'm trying to learn it less
for musical reasons than for creating sounds for films:
footsteps, atmosphere, etc.

With just a little more practice, I might be able to make an
awesome 20db roomtone haha


 

offline dingle berry from on a small plastic chair breat (Haiti) on 2008-03-13 02:28 [#02184803]
Points: 2389 Status: Regular



ill check c sound out now cheers spookyluke!


 


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