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Tiny, little piano riff with Enso looping...

Almost seems ridiculous to post such a tiny snippet, but I like the piece (as a contrast to the typical 10+ minute things I do) and, moreover, think the looping technique could be fun for others to try out.

Basically, Fugue Machine has a couple of playheads going different rates with different directions. The notes generated are converted to CC and used to toggle Enso's direction. This makes a "delay" that pseudo-chaotically reverses direction. It's mixed in low here to just provide some subtle texture, but I could imagine having more triggers for rate / section / etc. to make something harder and more pronounced.

Comments

  • That's great stuff.
    Feels like the intro music to a dark true crime series from Norway that just went live on Netflix and which I'm planning on bingeing starting NOW.

  • Nicely done and evocative. I admire your almost spatulated fingertips. I had a piano teacher whose fingertips flared out a bit. He was a great player even tho he was a knob design engineer... an unsung profession that has gone the way of... most knobs.

  • @aplourde said:
    Almost seems ridiculous to post such a tiny snippet, but I like the piece (as a contrast to the typical 10+ minute things I do) and, moreover, think the looping technique could be fun for others to try out.

    Basically, Fugue Machine has a couple of playheads going different rates with different directions. The notes generated are converted to CC and used to toggle Enso's direction. This makes a "delay" that pseudo-chaotically reverses direction. It's mixed in low here to just provide some subtle texture, but I could imagine having more triggers for rate / section / etc. to make something harder and more pronounced.

    Very cool technique and result!

  • @ExAsperis99 said:
    That's great stuff.
    Feels like the intro music to a dark true crime series from Norway that just went live on Netflix and which I'm planning on bingeing starting NOW.

    Thanks! Was probably channelling some Ólafur Arnolds....

    @LinearLineman said:
    Nicely done and evocative. I admire your almost spatulated fingertips. I had a piano teacher whose fingertips flared out a bit. He was a great player even tho he was a knob design engineer... an unsung profession that has gone the way of... most knobs.

    Well, I'm decidedly not a great player and "spatulated" tips aren't the greatest for poking tiny virtual buttons on glass screens!

    @espiegel123 said:
    Very cool technique and result!

    Yeah, I definitely need to experiment with this more....

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