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Jakob goes modular 😱

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Comments

  • edited June 2023

    @Wrlds2ndBstGeoshredr said:

    @dendy said:

    @Samu said:
    I smell a lot of ‘sponsored content’ on the horizon :sunglasses:

    I really hope module producers will notice him and "sponsor" him .. he deserves more attention and even "sponsored content" can be very honest ..

    Very excited about this Jakon's decision cause i am currently very much thinking about jumping on modular train too, so looking forward to hear about his experiences ..

    jumping on modular train == spending enough money to buy a car so I can make bleeps and bloops. Been there, had a great time. It will take many, many trips to the post office for me to get completely out of it.

    About a month ago I’ve decided to put together a mini portable hardware based rig consisting of Novation circuit, Roland aira Voice tweaker and ditto x4 audio looper, all battery powered and synced up together.

    One month later I’ve sold most of it and back on the iPad 🤣

    With Drambo I have an idea and soon after I can actually hear it.

    Physical modular is not for me but I can understand the appeal as well as commercial draw for a YouTube channel owner. Good luck Jakob.

  • edited June 2023

    @0tolerance4silence said:
    I’m always surprised that ‘sound’ never comes up as a reason.
    Yes, working with hardware and tactility is a big bonus, but iPad is by far the best controller I’ve ever used... yet, people who don’t seem to mind to spend ~$1000 on iDevices, find it hard to accept that there is a difference in sound between a $10 analog modelled app and a $1000 analog rig.

    It's much more complicated and not always true, but yes - in most cases it is like this. Just try crank up resonance on Model D plugin and then do same on Behringer Model D and the difference is intergalactic.

    But it's not just about digital vs. analog - modular doesn't inevitably menas to go full analog, many modules are digital.

  • @0tolerance4silence said:
    I’m always surprised that ‘sound’ never comes up as a reason.
    Yes, working with hardware and tactility is a big bonus, but iPad is by far the best controller I’ve ever used... yet, people who don’t seem to mind to spend ~$1000 on iDevices, find it hard to accept that there is a difference in sound between a $10 analog modelled app and a $1000 analog rig.

    I dunno man,

    I have a room full of most of the desirable analog synths but I find some apps just as good.

    Plus I never thought my modular ever sounded as good as my old synths.

  • @monz0id said:

    @jwmmakerofmusic said:
    I still don't understand the appeal of modular myself, but if @jakoB_haQ makes a video (and I'm betting proper money he will) about modular and makes it look sexy, I may as well revisit miRack.

    For me the attraction is having hardware knobs to twiddle - playing with the filters and oscillators on my MS20 for example is so much more fun, and faster than mucking about on desktop or iPad.

    I haven’t got a proper modular system, but I’m guessing it’s like the MS20 x 10. That’s 10x more fun, but the bit that puts me off is having to set everything up each time I want to play with a new patch. And the cost.

    The cost, oh yeah, yikes! 😅 But yeah I miss tweaking hardware knobs. Can't get that sensation on an iPad screen, although the iPad brings its own set of fun. But my uni had a couple of hardware synths to tweak. I had fun with those.

  • edited June 2023

    -

  • @0tolerance4silence
    I look at a fix architecture synth as a tool assembled by someone way more knowledgeable than I am... from the same building blocks, but handpicked for me because they work together well

    Very well said - because of exact opposite i decided recently to start building modular 😂 - in vast majority of cases i am never fully satisfied with prebuild fixed synth architecture and i would make different decisions :-))))

  • edited June 2023

    @rs2000 said:
    And space!
    These are exactly my reasons why I don't want a modular back, although there are really incredible modules out there today.

    I’ve been looking and can’t find his account now - but there’s a guy who sometimes pops up in my Instagram feed who’s made his own custom portable rig. Beautiful thing it is, with wooden panels, and fits into a suitcase, and he creates really nice ambient music with it. Lovely thing, I’d have one of those!

    I’ll post a link if I can find it again.

  • @monz0id said:

    @rs2000 said:
    And space!
    These are exactly my reasons why I don't want a modular back, although there are really incredible modules out there today.

    I’ve been looking and can’t find his account now - but there’s a guy who sometimes pops up in my Instagram feed who’s made his own custom portable rig. Beautiful thing it is, with wooden panels, and fits into a suitcase, and he creates really nice ambient music with it. Lovely thing, I’d have one of those!

    I’ll post a link if I can find it again.

    This. There are people doing lovely stuff with very small cases, you don’t have to have a huge setup.

    Johno Wells of Modular World fame says his happy place is an Intellijel 7u case, and he uses his bigger rack at home as a kind of module library. Maven Fiction has put together tiny cases, too. And our own @Svetlovska posted about a tiny lunchbox setup a while back. And I’ve written before about the lovely things done by Simone Salvatici on YouTube with a small case.

    I’ve yet to build a Eurorack case, though technically my Moogs are Eurorack modules, but the point @Svetlovska makes above re it being almost a separate experience holds true with my semi-modulars. I love the tactile nature of knobs, switches and cables. That said, I’m pretty resolutely hybrid, and the hardware inevitably ends up piped into my iPad and integrated with effects and other instruments in the box. But the patching experience is very different to how I work when I’m using the iPad exclusively.

    The absence of the ability to recall patches accurately is actually a plus in some ways: there’s something very satisfying about working just in the moment.

    I find it amusing that one of the reasons I bought my Moogs was seeing Jakob’s video about hating modular and patch cables, and a guy from Moog persuading him otherwise.

  • edited June 2023

    @monz0id said: out there today.

    I’ve been looking and can’t find his account now - but there’s a guy who sometimes pops up in my Instagram feed who’s made his own custom portable rig. Beautiful thing it is, with wooden panels, and fits into a suitcase, and he creates really nice ambient music with it. Lovely thing, I’d have one of those!

    I’ll post a link if I can find it again.

    modular doesn’t need to be monstrous big furniture … there sre also very small portable cases for literally just few modules .. like this or even smaller :

    I am currently building something like that, just about 2x of that size, around 15 modules in. desktop case …

    If you are low on budged / room - you can go super small and inexpensice (relatively) with modular :

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