Modular Synth (not a spaceship, this is an instrument)
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- Опубліковано 12 лис 2021
- Hopefully, by the end of this video, we'll have a basic understanding of how to fly this thing to the moon.
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this same video, but it's twice as long and the modular is SUPER loud: • The Modular Synth Vide...
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"Let's make something that sounds pretty."
*Creates what a panic attack sounds like.
Panic attack down a tunnel
@@gorlothmaclaren1924 in a video game on a train
Hahaha
Sounds cool to me…
I'm in tears
Ok so after seeing the synth in this video I think it could be bigger
Don't you mean it's going to be bigger? ahem
andrew huang
100% jajaj
Andrew going craaazy
Time to buy another rack then
Andrew is trying to create a self-generating song/soundscape, Rob is trying to create an instrument that he can play.
Exactly my thoughts, I don't think he understood that the sound being manipulated is what you'd get if you held down one note on a keyboard lol.
this is the enemy of art
@@broodjeworst9701 my comment is?
@@broodjeworst9701I think you might be the enemy of art actually.
The fact that you can’t see the artistry in what Andrew Huang wants out of a synthesizer doesn’t make it “not art”.
It’s not anywhere near the level of AI generated “art”, the human involvement is much greater with synths than with AI.
@@barmacidic2257 don't think. Feeling is better.
So, watching this, I'm definitely getting the sense that, "playing" a Modular Synth, is less like being a musician playing an instrument, and more like being a conductor directing an orchestra.
Definitely amazing to watch.
Yep. You're controlling how things control other things.
Best comment on this video.
It never occurred to me that a modular synth is rather like a pipe organ but omg...
@@PeregrinePilgrimage An electronic remaster of a pipe organ that lets you create any kind of melody you want, hell even create sounds and tones from different time periods if you really wanted to haha
It can be whatever you want it to be. Thats what's cool about modulars.
“WHY AM I DOING THIS. LETS GET SOME INVISIBLE HANDS TO DO IT.”
^the precise moment Rob became a modular guy.
Saw this after I made a similar comment lol
"you understand, invisible hands are the ruler of everything" or w/e tally hall said
They grow up so fast 😢
literally came to the comments as soon as it happened, this is the moment it really turns into a jam session
@@inexpensive_housing-2948 mfw mechanical hands 😳😳
them looking at the main camera makes me feel like the modular synth
pov: you’re a modular synth being messed around by andrew and rob
Pov rob wont stop messing with ur nob
@@prettypointlessvideo 😳
@@prettypointlessvideo pov: you're a modular synth and they keep plugging wires in and out through all of your holes while messing around with your knobs
@@Cyclically too far
Two things on this:
1, I would pay a lot of money to see a live mod-synth show
2, I would pay an hourly fare to play with a modular synth
Was thinking the same (2).. There is no way I can affort one but would love to jam on one for some times..
@@orotoi1 You can actually find free virtual modular synth though. Cardinal for example is an open-source vst plugin you can set up for yourself.
@@falaghsepehr5504 ye i know.. But I would love to have hands on such a hardware..
@@orotoi1 I know... but Cardinal is a good starting point imo
You could also pair something like VCV Rack (or I assume Cardinal as well) with a midi assignable controller. You may not have all the options, but it gives you physical controls at a fraction of the cost.
30:45 When he said "do you wanna make a snare drum from scratch?" it really hit me that synths are just a factory that can produce every instrument and then program people to play them.
Yeah but it takes a ridiculous amount of experience to be able to do that
i realised that metronomes are just synths, from this video
@@tomekk.1889just plug an envelope into the volume of noise, should be a good snare to start with
noise->amplifier
^
envelope
@@physicschaosdev it takes a lot of experience to fine tweak it tho. Gotta find the right noise, choose the right speed for the envelope and pitch etc.
It is pretty easy if you know the concept.
Rob there's a standing invite to come check out the world's weirdest guitars, pedals and gimmicky gadget collection.
This would be a beautiful thing.
That: I'd happily crank through my bus speakers for all to hear
We need Rob with your midi guitar/any other crazy guitar and a bunch of pedals! Pedal time with y'all would be GREAT. Maybe even hit up JHS pedals too and have a trifecta. Love love love your channel.
That'd be awesome, y'all can do a jam with em.
That would be awesome!!!!
Rob: Let's try to make the prettiest sound possible.
Rob, 2 seconds later: Let's turn all the knobs to maximum!
Pretty much all my patch stories.
Let`s just start turning knobs and see what happens :)
and can't stop hitting that freakn spring reverb...
Like a true musician.
That's science, baby.
I love how you went from "let's make something beautiful" to "industrial hellscape"
I don't know if you've ever gotten to play with something similar to this but it always devolves into the system going full runaway. I did that with a friend's pedal board once and I had to cut the power to everything to get it to stop
@@harveyhandbanana nice!
I think they both are learning
“Let’s make something pretty.”
54 patch cables later.
“I understand that!”
2907 years later, archaeologists find Rob mummified in rainbows of silicone insulated copper wires.
This one made my evening :D Thank you :D
... With the biggest grin possible...
I think they both are learning new things that's what happens when you teach something to someone.
Rob: "Is there a mute button?"
Andy: *yanks the patch cable out of the module*
should i skip school for youtube video making? i making good stuff but i need much time to making. maybe replace school with making videos. i have two girlfriends. thanks for your opinion dear x
@@AxxLAfriku no
@@AxxLAfriku get your deploma first cuz u need that if your UA-cam doesn’t work out
@@AxxLAfriku disgusting
@@AxxLAfriku By seing the way you write sentences, you should stay in school.
Andrew: dialing in new parameters with both hands
Rob: S P R I N G
Rob “Can We put reverb on it?” Scallon
That sequence they get into at about 39:00 is so nasty bro. I would literally pay money to have a whole album of that kind of stuff. Makes me feel like I could run through a wall.
Aphex Twin has entire albums like that (Richard D. James Album and Drukqs especially!)
www.youtube.com/@jerobeamfenderson1 :)
ScreamerClauz - Mutwa
There's some killer sound 4 ya!
Hotline Miami
Reminded me a bit of some Mr Oizo tracks
This shows how complex yet subtle the world of music is. This makes me emotional for some reason.
Humbling how much sound there is out there to hear.
Basically this is performance, I like how Andrew ego is not showing up lets Rob learn and they both learn new things.
Andy: "You want to make a snare drum from scratch?"
Rob: (pupils dilate)
lmaoooo accurate
Andy? ok...
"And this is how we rebuilt 'rain' on a modular Synth" 5 Hour video with a room sized modular synth.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Now run this thru the MIDI of the pipe organ
@@codesent2125 I wo9uld love to see a service with midi sounds. maybe composed by rob? Mainly as a childrens service or so not a full serious one. Maybe check the midi issues they had before having them again
I'm not a musician, but as a programmer this is basically what i do, just patch modules to modules so this appeals so much to me.
Same here. Would really like to program such synth
VCV Rack is basically a modular synth simulator for your computer, you can do everything they did but for free.
So is this your first time hearing of a modular synth? Or how did you find this video if your not a musician?
I watch a channel related to hardware engineering and programming that also features a lot of synth stuff and this just popped up for me.
@@futur_sunds
@@futur_sunds popular channel it gets recommended, how do you use this site
Im so in love with the fact that you guys messing around went through like 20 weird genres of music
Rare footage of Rob being the only person not wearing a beanie
I feel like this is Rob's BBC show whenever he goes around learning about instruments and music from all over the place.
it basically is already. these are some of the highest quality videos anywhere on youtube, even better than a lot of actual tv shows
isnt that THE Dream? Making Music for a living and exploring even more of it?
I read that sentence incorrectly.
@@yungpm 🤣🤣
big black coc
This is such a mad scientist way of making music. I double plus heart it!
Yes. It's one of my favorite things to do!
There was a literal transition from structuring the instrument to letting it do it’s own thing. The music got 100 times better. Very cool
I like how this video goes from basic modularity in synths, to engineer levels, to random chaos in 45 minutes
the end sounds like it would be a brutal doom theme
I think that's how Eurorack goes for most people.
I love how Rob went from "oh, explain what that thing does" to straight up jamming
Blows my mind how quickly he picks up instruments!
I know,! If you saw his video on the history of guitars with the all the old stringed instruments like the lute? And the oud? He was rippin on those ! Lol, even the historian dude was like " whoa" LOL.
Rob seems to be ulitmate jammer, you give him any instrument and he finds way to jam with it.
Hes like a big kid in these vids, its awesome, genuine enjoyment on his face. Lol. Informative too!
Does anyone else think Andrew is a great teacher? The way he explains things is simple yet thorough to me… maybe I’m just too damn high right now lmao
for anyone to explain their setup to another is frustrating but collaboration is key.. respect to these dudes for creating and learning together...
I never realized two people could jam on the same synth without getting in each other's way. What an interesting way to collab.
Anything is possible with a large enough synth
I think Andrew and Rob are quite in tune too
Admittedly it's a fucking enormous synth, anything smaller and it might be harder or you might get in each other's way more
@@lorde_spooky The sheer size and complexity is worth it in the end since you're given vast amounts of control over what type of sounds you want to create.
@@TheSilverShadow17 oh i agree, i was just trying to say that it would be much harder for two people to jam on the same synth like this if it was a normal size setup, much easier to get in each other's way
The only thing I like about Rob Scallon more than Andrew Huang is video length. Sweet, sweet, 45 minutes of modular geeking
Agreed. Andrews videos are great and they take so much effort so I totally get it, but I love when he puts out a 25-30 minute video
Most people have short attention spans.
Andrew's videos are like a beautiful cheesecake dessert and Rob's are like a full 5 course meal. Sometimes the cheesecake is exactly what you need but sometimes you haven't eaten all day and you need that 5 course.
theyre both awesome. but yeah i literally sat through this whole video and geeked out with them ahaha
The way the two of them are just enjoying each other's innovation makes me so happy
Rob hitting the spring reverb and then laughing out loud is my favorite part of this video
I love that Rob goes from “let’s make the prettiest sound we can” to “bleep bloop bop robot” in 7 seconds
Every time I think I want to get into modular synths:
Andrew: This is a module.
Me: you lost me
It's basically making your own custom synth. Imagine each module is essentially an effects pedal, and you're chaining them together in the order of your choosing
@@boratezel you lost me at module
@@nom6758 it's your own custom synth, like building your own computer
Or i look at the price and then im out lol
@@boratezel or better yet, your own guitar pedal board
Only Andrew and Rob would within 35 minutes go from "invisible hands" to Justice's next hit
Rob: sees a spring reverb
Also Rob: I must *s l a p p*
Now we need a once a year synth band that's called 13th of November.
Now I get why John Frusciante spent 10 years experimenting with modular synths. This is a whole new world to explore.
He makes some cool stuff too imho
Hoping he doesn't take it to RHCP
Frank Zappa would lose his mind seeing this modern day synth setup
@@Qliphirot don't worry, he won't. that's what I love about john frusciante is that he will always understand his place in a musical context and play for the song, not for the experimentation.
Radiohead created their song Idiotque using modular synths just like this. They brought it on tour, was amazing to see it live.
This is why people play in bands , for these vibes of pure collab creativity
So 7 months later and I have watched this video probably 5 times. This is by far my favorite video on UA-cam. It's just two friends making music and having fun. There is no arguing, no struggle for attention on camera, just the most real video I have ever seen. Mix that with the incredible hobby of modular synth and you have the best video on the platform. :)
Andrew's Spaceship Synth is quite possibly the most intimidating piece of musical equipment I've ever seen
Nah, checkout ua-cam.com/channels/x74vAHCehhLOeQNwbJcGyQ.html (Colin Benders). The guy does this and much more. Even live jamming performances.
Have you seen deadmau5's studio
The Emerson modular system is insane.
you must have never seen the triangle before. deceptively simple!!!!
@@MarcelAmmerlaan came here to say this, Colin benders is a modular genius!
I love how rob just sees andrew's tenthousand+ dollar setup and decides "yeah Im gonna slap this"🤣
My stomach turned when he was slappin that spring reverb lol
@@joshuar622 i mean its kind of made to slap
I would not be dissapointed if I saw him with this setup creating music like this live at a concert.
Something like this would likely be an installation somewhere, or something like Neil Peart's kit where it's encompassing the artist.
Look mum,no computer does it with his home-built modules.
That was an absolute journey. I learned so much. Thanks as always Rob and Andrew.
I feel like a really chill video would be just a really long unedited cut of Andrew making a patch. Modular ASMR
Andrew has a second channel with exactly that. Search Sulture sound.
@@elliott7268 thank you!! I was wishing he had some vids like that, super glad to hear that there is
*Suture Sound
I would seriously kill to just see a unedited video of Andrew just making sounds for an hour and zoning out
I think you can find stuff like that on his second channel, Suture Sounds :)
all in
Just sick. All of it. So many little grooves you guys got into. I couldn't stop watching you guys play around. So fun. Thanks for sharing!
it took 42mins and both andrew and rob are just making absolute fire
Musicians having instruments that are more expensive than their cars seems to be a common theme.
many many times more expensive, and lets not talk about artists' supplies, I used to transport paintings to shows strapped to the side of my motorcycle [well several cheap motorcycles over time]
Why not? Why have an expensive car and not an expensive instrument?
@@stevenwilson1146 yes really, why not expensive workhorse for musicians
instruments are like drugs. i would starving, without my dears stopping me from buying more and more expensive once without a second trough :/
The feeling i have every time i get closer and closer to the exact pitch i have in my head 🤤🤤 pure bliss ♥♥
Car only has 3 notes
This has all the notes
At the 34 minute mark some real magic starts. A pure expression built from nothing and never to be heard exactly the same way again. This is really cool and greatly enhanced my understanding of why modular has such a following.
i mean you can hear it the same way again by going to the 35 minute mark o3o
This video made me so happy watching you guys create together. 😁
It feels like this modular synth is to playing an instrument what pen plotting algorithms are to drawing, absolutely love it
Rob was trying his hardest to make it a physical instrument with that spring reverb 😂
That's the beauty of it though. It CAN be and that kinda experimental stuff is what makes synths so cool.
Trying shit nobody ever thought of doing is how Eddie van Halen got his virtuoso status among most guitar fans.
I feel like the cables alone cost more than my entire musical setup. Also, I want to see Andrew in a mad scientist costume making crazy sounds with this thing.
The cables are stupidly expensive
I tought about both being mad scientist all along lol
there's a dude doing exactly that called : "LOOK MUM NO COMPUTER"
He did a totally crazy 1000 oscillator contraption : ua-cam.com/video/c3wk9WWTfNs/v-deo.html
Yeah those stack cables cost a pretty penny
Bro this looks like so much fun. And the beats ya'll came up with were dope!
This is is amazing beyond words. I love how it starts as an explanation about how modules work and halfway through it's jamming.
Andrew, you should definitely start a series where you invite various UA-cam musicians to play with your modular synth. Would be so cool to see what these talented people could do with it!
Second completely! He's such a chill dude and clearly has spent many a night just enjoying his time with the instrument.
wow yes! that would be awesome!
I fourth that notion.
I quintup it. It could even be like an hour long "live" or at least uncut video of the evolution of the song, with minimal talking, as kind of a "listening party".
yup!
Having studied computer engineering I can picture the waves at the beginning and the algorithmic functions each module "executes" later on. This is programming music with analog circuits...
FUN
you can definitely see the e^ix involved in all of this!
@@paradox9551 In sine waves only obviously. Actually I've really learn the trigonometry and algebra through programming knobs in a DAW.
Worst part, me too, I am just seeing it as an algorithm and you now, this is why music pi is so cool
Fortunately me having a majors in Telecommunication Engineering, I understand everything that's going on. I remember making weird noises with a VCO in our lab 😃
This is exactly what got me into basic synthesizers and later on to Reason
This has actually helped me understand how these work. I got a free mod synth Sim and had no understanding of what I was doing, this really clarifies how these work
by far best music creation and learning video ive seen in a long time. reminds me of the old style videos that u get the world out of
When rob scallon is making music with a space ship and invisible hands you Know you're in for a treat
Rob: "There's no other instrument that has, like, a probability..."
Rob, let me introduce you to unfretted bowed string instruments and my questionable intonation.
hahaha
Haha! So good.
So true.
Rob,
Great show. I've been watching a lot of your videos of late and have enjoyed all of them. Especially your enthusiasm and love of music.
I've always wanted to be able to use and better understand modular synth. Now if only I had the money...
Thanks again.😁
Rob: “Let’s make something pretty”
Also Rob 2 seconds later: I AM CHAOS!!
Also Rob 10 seconds later: Makes cool synth.
Rob: So if I turn this knob, the pitch changes?
Rob: So if I turn this knob, the pitch changes?
Rob: So if I turn this knob, the pitch changes?
Rob: So if I turn this knob, the pitch changes?
Rob: So if I turn this knob, the pitch changes?
Ok I understand now.
Bwahahahaha ‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️😂
Tbf there were a lot of knobs that change the pitch
Yeah right me too
Rob: I found a metal thing under tension with a pickup on it!
Andrew: ...
Rob: I'm gonna slap it
Yay! Andrew and Rob together again!
Make more videos like this guys, your creativity blending together is awesome!
the problem I'm sure is location, Rob's in America, Andrew's in Canada, so they don't hang out often, and the pandemic made it impossible.
I loved the videos with Andrew, Rob, Joel, and Dave together, those were great.
how is ur comment 11 hours old but the video only 9
@@boob5798 stream probably
@@boob5798 i'm sure it's some patreon thing, patrons have earlier access to Robs videos
This is so cool! I love synth and I knew it was made with some type of soundboard but I had no idea it was so complex! One of my favourite types of music is synthwave, I love how it sounds. Also, this looks so fun to play. I could definitely see how one could spend hours playing and discovering all the different sounds and tracks you could make
Rarely can i say this but i actually had fun simply by watching a video. Making music is my most favorite thing to do and just by seeing you guys co-pilot that spaceship i almost got that same feeling that i get when i'm learning how to play a new instrument. That was really awesome!
Man, layer some guitars over a few of the patterns you guys created, and you've got a pretty passable Nine Inch Nails sound.
Hahaha totally
Trent's modular walls are amazing!
Try running a guitar through the FX as well
@@VodkaSelekta Guitar through analog wavefolder and filter is great!
And anything with an acoustic guitar is instant Bob Dylan 🙄
I love the dichotomy of an instrument that gives the the most possible control you can get over the sound you make, but the best way to play it is to let it do things itself instead of controlling everything.
I have long imagined such a thing and surprised to see it only now. Its wonderful. THank you.
Man this video is great. I was trying to learn some sound design and was having trouble with some of the concepts of it and this video gave me a better understanding of synths in general.
This really reminds me of programming. Almost all programming languages you come into contact with are imperative, telling the computer what to do in sequence. On the other hand, query languages let you specify the data you want to plug in and how the result should be shaped and the computer is free to decide how to get there.
They are incredibly powerful and beautiful once you know how to use them, but it's really hard to let go and not try to hammer an imperative mindset into them at first. You don't try to play them like an instrument, but shape the sound you want and let the synth do its thing.
this is exactly what the first computers used to be like: full rooms of modules and patch cords that all fit inside one processor now
Current digital sythesizer are using this exact logic. They're embedded processors programmed to control a sound generator IC which creates the music
Try Max 7 or Supercollider.
Find someone who loves you as much as Rob loves that pitch knob.
this is mind blowing.. ive seen others do it and just the amount of work to learn all of this.. mad respect
I never realized just how much went into this kind of music making. This is so cool, and really helps me to respect the craft. You gotta be like a music engineer to do well with this stuff. Super cool.
I love how the song went from smooth fairy tale-esque vibes to bip-bop robot futuristic vibes, to underground city hiphop vibes. Absolute thing of beauty.
I know getting across the pond is tough rn but a video where Rob and Andrew visit LOOK MUM NO COMPUTER's Museum of Everything Else would be so awesome
They should visit Heinbach
Oh hell yes! That would be awesome
A whole uk and Europe tour would be sweet
HI I'M LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER AND IN TODAY'S EPISODE I'M GOING TO CIRCUIT BEND ROB SCALLON
OK, that would be absolutely cool!
Never knew how much I needed a Rob and Andrew techno duo
Small little correction on the oscillators: Oscillators produce waves. Analog oscillators convert DC signal from the power supply through various simple electronic components into an AC signal, where the signal then oscillates at a certain frequency in a certain sort of pattern/"shape". There's no physical object vibrating in there, it's the electric signal that oscillates. The difference between analog and digital in synths is that analog synths produce sounds fully with low level components and circuits instead of the output signal being an algorithmically computed product of digital signal processing. Think of it like this: analog synths are like your one sound distortion/OD/Fuzz pedals and tube/solid state amp heads, digital synths are like multi-effect units/modeling amps/amp sims.
If you have for example a saw wave generator based off a transistor (I saw one being made in LookMumNoComputer's channel once) then there IS something physically oscillating in there, not exactly moving but changing states. But that's almost at the atomic scale.
What I'm trying to bring up is that even electrical components which don't move often have physical stuff happening in them, particles changing places or swapping states. Not really correcting you here, just some food for thought.
@@jonpatchmodular Yeah, that's essentially what I said. What I meant is that there's no physical object vibrating there or anything. I guess the way you phrased it is a bit more comprehensive though. 😁
Wish Frank Zappa or my dad (Navy radar) were here to enjoy this.
@@jonpatchmodular love to listen to the sound of electrons vibrating through the PNP (or indeed NPN) layers
In electronics... never be so sure :) Oscillators usually have a capacitor which is being charged or discharged.. And capacitors usually do vibrate a little bit. And sometimes a lot, for example some ceramic capacitors have huge microphone effect and they also can sound as a tiny speaker. I once had an old radio with broken speaker but I could hear the radio through ceramic cap there, lol. So there is definitely something always vibrates in the oscillator but it is not what makes the wave though. Just a fun thing :) Physical world is much more complex than people usually think...
I love the interaction of Rob not having any clue on how to do anything but having ideas and Andrew figuring out how to make those ideas como to life lol
Rumor has it that Moog put a keyboard on his synthesizers so that musicians would recognize them as instruments. Apparently, he was criticized by other synthesizer makers for the move.
wendy carlos was the one who suggested it iirc
I'm new to synths, how were individual notes played one at a time before they added keyboards?
@@zachhaywood1564 I suppose with adjusting electrical current using dials - like they do in the video
@@zachhaywood1564 Buchla (Moog's main competitor) used touch pads similar to the one on a laptop. RCA used a piano roll.
@@zachhaywood1564 step sequencers are a popular method. But the cool thing with synths is you don't need to be playing notes at all.
this swiftly went from ALMOST calm and controlled, to complete and utter madness and i'm ALL for it
Man i remember seeing the frame for this is one of Andrew's videos and being excited about the new video and it never coming. So cool to see it in action
This might be the only instrument you can actually play WITH a friend. Its so sad that the power of absolute customization/personality is so expensive
I have good news! Most instruments can be played with a friend for fun if you're keen enough. =)
A lot of large instruments, like the piano and harp have a history of more serious and practical duet composition and performance (adding a second person enhances it, rather than just making a fun challenge, like trying to duet with a harmonica or a guitar). Search for piano duets and prepare to be amazed.
you can totally do that with software synths, just start messing with the synth, and the other person can man the keys, and vice versa. I've had some fun jamming with friends that way, just making any sound that comes to mind, and messing with effects.
It's been a long time since I studied electronic music in college (1982!), but as I recall, you get random notes by modulating white noise with a sample-and-hold signal. And by the way, in case you've discovered the process of "building the sound from scratch" on your own and want to read up on it, it's called "additive synthesis." I'm glad you guys are experimenting with this. (p.s. we had a 7-step sequencer that was about half the size of a spinet piano, and was really state of the art at the time.)
Haha, I loved reading this comment. We've come a long way since the '80s, that's for sure! By the way, I watched your video of you playing Scarlatti Sonata in G, and couldn't leave a comment because commenting was disabled. I just wanted to say that you played beautifully and that I loved the piece!
@@TheMphc Because of your comment, I went and watched his video. Beautiful playing for sure.
Wait till you get a load of that eclipse ;)
Sample-and-hold is one way to generate random values, but it's far from the only way. Most of the randomness in this video came from digital controllers using math to generate random numbers and perform logic.
Additive synthesis is a very specific type of synthesis which usually refers to adding sine waves together at harmonic intervals to create timbres. This is contrasted to subtractive synthesis, which starts with a harmonically-rich tone like a square or sawtooth wave, and then removes or dampens frequencies with a filter. Subtractive is the most common type.
In this video, they mostly used other techniques. However, I recall a couple times they mentioned using a filter, so some of it was subtractive. And it looked like the bass oscillator may have used some additive waveforms as starting points for its blend... not sure. It may have been FM or wavetable instead, or something else entirely. It appeared to generate two single-cycle waveforms and blend between them kind of like a small wavetable, but the two endpoints were being changed too.
This is genuinely one of favourite videos on UA-cam. I think this is my 4th or 5th time watching it and I get something new out of it each time
Thanks for making this. Such a great primer! :)
I had no idea you could physically interact with a spring reverb like that, that's amazing...so many interesting sounds and insights in this video!
Check out his recent video on Reverb Machines, your mind will be blown! He has a whole jam session playing the reverb springs like an instrument
ua-cam.com/video/0gjcUb5otGQ/v-deo.html&t= you are welcome
If you tap the right hand side of a Moog Grandmother (or any synth with a spring reverb) you will get a bang through the spring reverb like that.
@@Hasserfyllt That's awesome thank you
@@aidan_mundy Nice somehow I missed that one, will check it out
I've never touched modular, but it seems like Rob really wants to "play" the sounds while Andrew lets something else take the wheel with just a few guidelines. Both mentalities compliment each other well.
When you know nothing about how this stufff works, the only thing you could do is wiggiling some knobs, just like if somebody gave you a guitar and you don't know how to play it, you just randomly strum the strings. With some knowledge you typically stop just messing around, start building concepts how modular ‘could‘ sound and what it's capable of. So it's not about mentalities, it's about knowing the instrument.
@@31pas0 unskilled people like to boil down hard work into "mentality" or "talent" while ignoring all the hard work and time required to get that good, because they dont have what it takes to put in the same amount of effort.
@@31pas0 "the only thing you could do is wiggiling some knobs"
Although I understand what your saying, its amazing just what you can do by randomly "wiggling some knobs". Ive watched school kids screw around with modular synths they knew nothing about and after a minute or two create a sound that is utterly amazing. I don't doubt that "understanding" how the building blocks work helps, but when your working with modular...never underestimate chaos.
@@anthonybrett beautiful. You tend to figure out what knobs are doing what as you go anyway. While your path won't be clear to getting where you want, you can still get there with some experimenting. Part of the beauty of synths is the very low barrier of entry as far as skill and knowledge.
@@ethanradell7995 Agreed. Thats what I love about modular the most. Starting out with no goals. No presets...just a journey!
I’ve been waiting for a video just like this! Awesome!
Rob: Tuning by dial is new for me
Also Rob: plays an instrument that tunes by knob
Also Rob: Seems to have a close obsession with the pitch control knob
That moment in synthesis class when I realized I couldn’t find the “volume button” because in order to turn down the annoyingly loud oscillator, you need to physically patch it through to a potentiometer (?….it’s been a while..) in charge of amplitude and then you get a “volume button”, not a second before. And my mind exploded all over the classroom lol 😂
Believe it or not, it’s been the most valuable lesson in terms of acoustic instruments, how their sound is created and their conversion into electrical signal.
Also, once you try creating the sound of a violin string being played with a bow and you realize it’ll take you ages to find all the natural overtones of the strings, the wood, the room, the hair on the bow….. how it host the room and your position in it… that’s when you start appreciating nature.
That’s awesome how you’re interested in this type of music creation. That’s true about nature. You don’t know what you got until it’s gone.
Oh, this has got to be one of my favorite comments :)
The fundamental part of producing sounds is actually quite simple (waves!), but what you can do with it to generate interesting sounds has so many nuances! That's what's really beautiful about music!
You are just describing timbre.
@@krs-fltutorials4487 Or, rather, the complexity of timbre?
Do u think its possible to appreciate nature before having this experience?
/s
I feel like this format could make a great live show. Two folks talking about the tech, then they build some sounds and beats and maybe jam over the top of it.
And maybe each episode they have a themr or goal in mind
LOL, you guys are having waay too much fun with this! The possibilities are literally *ENDLESS!* 😮😄
“Do you wanna make a snare from scratch?” The way Andrew excitedly asks Rob like little kids playing in the backyard. This was so fun to watch!
They just have such a fun friendship, there’s so much knowledge being transmitted from Andrew, and Rob is just geekin, excited to learn from his friend :’)
Honestly after hearing the bit around 30:05, all the dirty bass in the last 5 minutes, and seeing how well you two were able to improvise together it's a sin if you don't make at least one track. That was some incredible stuff.
They made an album together 😂
@@alexanderxul three albums together. But I agree with OP, I'd love to see them use this beast for at least a full track
@@ianbyrne465 tru
It's not only a sin but a sin wave
@@ianbyrne465 where can I find those?
Loved this. Thanks guys. I needed this. Good shit!
It's amazing that the sound evolves with the video to become clearer and more beautiful just as Rob's understanding of it increases. It's quite the living bit of poetry