This is truly one of those rare bucket list moments.
A Little Paint
Glad I have some good books on tape. This little home improvement project is clearly gonna take the rest of the summer to complete.
A Place to Sit…
…out of the dirt. Building a simple floating deck can’t be too hard, right?
Provided I master a few tools and a little patience.
Look at that! A quick tap o’ the hammer, and we have a lovely place to view the stars while resting from all the deck construction.
It’s Really Not So New
Since returning from April’s Spring South trip I’ve busied myself with seasonal repairs, property cleanup, and general improvements.
This process has helped me realize something critical about my experience living in the cabin… I’m finding joy in allowing things around me to be NOT new.
Defining NOT New
Put simply, there’s a special kind of ‘newness’ new things seem to have. And it can be really nice. New things are shiny or smooth and generally flawless. But allowing things to show wear lets us know that someone has lived here… and done things… and maybe even done them in a specific way.
It’s a small relief to feel I don’t need to worry about things becoming NOT new. Oddly, this is a new experience for me.
Growing Self Reliance
As long as things function as I need them to, I’m good to go. And if they don’t, a twist of the screw here… a tap of the hammer there… and all’s right with the world. Or my little piece of it, at least.
Increased self reliance. I guess that’s the point. It’s a trait generally thought of as common to New Englanders, and maybe I’m just starting to absorb it? I post this here to remind myself of the value of things getting good use and aging naturally.
Including my own self.
Modular Experiments
I purchased my first bit of eurorack kit in 2022 and put it to work in numerous projects. What attracted me to modular that it provided a convenient way to access a wide range of classic sounds that modern synths simply can’t produce.
Until now, I’ve treated it as a configurable performance instrument – a way to bring the past to today. But what else can it do? And what happens when you mix and match these classic modules in ways not previously possible?
In search of answers, I spent a quality evening designing a few analog modular drum kits, testing each patch idea with multiple oscillators and routings from various modules.
Let’s listen…
Kicks
We’ll start with a kick created with the Roland System 500 (triangle VCO waveform):
Here’s the same Roland filter etc. but fed by a sine from Behringer’s Arp 2600 clone:
Same as above, but with a pure sine from Deckard’s Voice in place of the Arp:
And finally, a mixture of oscillators from the rare and magical Ondes VCO:
Snares
Because the System 500 envelopes are so wonderfully snappy, I decided to stick with them for the snares. I pulled in a little white noise from Deckard’s Voice and some pink-ish noise from the Arp 2600 and tried various oscillator, envelope settings, and mixed the sources to taste.
This snare features the Arp 2600 pulse (square) wave:
Same as above but fed by Deckard’s sine:
And a lovely mixture of ultra-classic oscillator designs from the Ondes VCO:
Full Kit Pattern
So I picked my favorite combinations, designed a couple of cymbals and…
…multitracked a simple drum pattern (dry, compression only):
Just for fun I mixed in a sampled kit as well to see if they played well together:
Conclusions?
A lovely evening was had by all. No losers here! I was particularly struck by the dramatic differences with such small changes in the various source modules.
Dial in your patches carefully, kids. And hunt for those sweet spots… it’s easy to miss ’em!
Modular FTW!
More March Snow
Somewhere under there is the wood from seven large trees that needs splitting.
Believe it or not, this snow is melting a bit… or maybe my ruler’s broken.
From too much snow.
But I’m starting to think this snow ain’t gonna melt itself.
Where did I put that hair dryer?