Interesting, thanks for the walk-through! I used to do a lot of ambient guitar looping with VCV, these modules could be a great option for that. Simpliciter used to be my weapon of choice for playing back at different octaves and scrubbing through the buffer, but seems a bit buggy these days. I'll definitely be trying your collection at some point instead. 👍
The short answer is currently "not yet". I've always expected to do an additional module in this system that would be better suited to loops that are smaller than the whole length of the buffer. In the meantime, you can *maybe* hack something together by sending a signal to the POSITION SET input whenever you want it to return to some particular position. I admit that this is not terribly convenient, especially since SET only works when you _change_ the value, so if you, say, want to repeatedly set the position to 1.0V, you have to change SET to something else, and then switch back to 1.0V. I don't consider this a "good way" :), but it could sort of work. The chapter at 7:09 gives some insight into doing this, but this bears little resemblance to what I suspect you mean.
Just discovered these thanks to Omri. Congratulations! One question - is it possible to record non-audio CV e.g. like the "Seq" 1 V/O output from Slips ? I quickly tried it just now, but the Embellish record button doesn't do anything when I try to activate it.
Whoa, there's an Omri video? Thanks for the heads up! (found it, it's th-cam.com/video/WQ9XN9qqOYI/w-d-xo.html). While the signal ducking that happens when heads pass each other may cause the playback of CV to do surprising things, I have certainly recorded CV using Memory. And I have a future plan to make a MemoryCV module that is better tuned to recording CV, but the existing one will work. But I'll upload an example video later this week to demonstrate that it's possible.
I'm going to have so much fun with this. Thank you!
Interesting, thanks for the walk-through! I used to do a lot of ambient guitar looping with VCV, these modules could be a great option for that. Simpliciter used to be my weapon of choice for playing back at different octaves and scrubbing through the buffer, but seems a bit buggy these days. I'll definitely be trying your collection at some point instead. 👍
Very cool idea! I haven't played much with memory/sampling modules before. This one is pushing me over the edge. I'm gonna try these tonight!
Wonderful! Would love to hear anything you come up with.
Very interesting Mahlen, thanks!
I love these so much. One question: is there a good way to implement a tap-tempo loop?
The short answer is currently "not yet".
I've always expected to do an additional module in this system that would be better suited to loops that are smaller than the whole length of the buffer. In the meantime, you can *maybe* hack something together by sending a signal to the POSITION SET input whenever you want it to return to some particular position. I admit that this is not terribly convenient, especially since SET only works when you _change_ the value, so if you, say, want to repeatedly set the position to 1.0V, you have to change SET to something else, and then switch back to 1.0V. I don't consider this a "good way" :), but it could sort of work.
The chapter at 7:09 gives some insight into doing this, but this bears little resemblance to what I suspect you mean.
Just discovered these thanks to Omri. Congratulations! One question - is it possible to record non-audio CV e.g. like the "Seq" 1 V/O output from Slips ? I quickly tried it just now, but the Embellish record button doesn't do anything when I try to activate it.
Whoa, there's an Omri video? Thanks for the heads up! (found it, it's th-cam.com/video/WQ9XN9qqOYI/w-d-xo.html).
While the signal ducking that happens when heads pass each other may cause the playback of CV to do surprising things, I have certainly recorded CV using Memory. And I have a future plan to make a MemoryCV module that is better tuned to recording CV, but the existing one will work. But I'll upload an example video later this week to demonstrate that it's possible.