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but has some really great sounds, I think like the soundtrack chorus in your favorite sci-fi/steam punk/ancient action adventure modern mystery movie horror thriller. This one has more FX (delay and 'verb) than I usually use.
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so here's a link to Luna 15Īnd a quite recent - fresh and juicy, moist and tender Luna17ĮDIT - Adding one more (just one, really!) from the archives. I've apparently got to finagle a little more upload space here.
Bidule as summing amp free#
These things are addicting - my modular has sat mostly unused for the past 6 months as I spend my free build/music time with the Lunetta. The machine is 4XXX CMOS except for 2 555 VCOs and some op-amps for mixing/summing (ie R/2R ladder) These are recorded in one pass, no knob twiddling and some light effects - delay and reverb for a little depth. Luna11 is posted elsewhere on this board so some may have heard it already. Here's some autonomous patches with my Lunetta. Thanks for the material sizone and slacker, I'll wait to get some more Lunetta artist's work before putting together a pre-recorded show. Just a bunch of clocks and loads of knob twiddling Regardless, intro's a little slow but I think it's a fun track overall, especially considering the turn-around time in putting it together. If you want a tech demo of what a device is capable of, then recording a few hours worth of it making noise, trimming it up and layering it just seems like cheating. That I multitracked likewise bothers me from a purist standpoint. My incursions against the second are however, I think, excusable. From pretty much any angle I trounce all over the first. User involvement should be limited to turning the thing on.īoth of these are endlessly debatable, but both also strike me as noble design aims, especially the second. For the most part it's just the machines running amok, but a lot of the samples I ended up using caught me redhanded with my fingers on the potentiometers.įor lunetta purists, my lurking turned up 2 points of design philosophy: Components should be standard cmos logic chips. Third: This isn't fully autonomous or environmentally controlled. Other than that there's no external processing. Almost every part is composed of three different chunks mixed down (channels occasionally swapped). Second: I used some Soundforge editting, this is assembled from three different nights worth of recording. Whether this falls under circuit bending or lunetta is not my call to make. The clock signals I'm using are standard cmos, but the noises are, for the most part, being generated by discarded antique microcontrollers (the brain from an old Cannon bubblejet for the first part and an Intel chip (circa '82!) from some bizarre keypad assembly for the second part). A few doubts though.įirst: this isn't -really- lunetta stuff (man, there's a mood killer). I'll take your posting to this thread as permission to broadcast your material. If you would like me to include some of your Lunetta songs on the show, please post them to this thread. I've given some thought to doing an occasional show about other aspects of our forum, and a Lunetta show seems like a good thing to try.ĭepending on interest and amount of material, I may be able to create a prerecorded Lunetta show. Subject description: How about a Lunetta Radio Show?Īs you may know, I do a weekly broadcast on radio called The ChucK Show. Mark the topic unread :: View previous topic :: View next topic
Bidule as summing amp software#
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