The PSIM is so flexible that tossing around these scenarios is almost pointless. :-) Andrew and I both suggested to Zon that the PSIM makes an excellent quantizer. I had told Zon that the PSIM-1 is a "programmable quantizer/scaler/linear-to-expo/etc..." I also noted to Andrew the PSIM it is probably the only standalone module that could interface an MS-20 (linear), a MiniMoog (0.9V/Oct?), and EML (1.2V/Oct?) and a 2600 (good old 1V/Oct) together at the same time. Expanding on Andrew's idea (below), you could use one of the CV inputs for a "mode" switch. One mode would drive the 2600 monophonically (with VCO intervals as programmed) which the other mode would generate chords. Another approach would be to use 2 different keyboards, one for chords and one for unison lines. Or how about quantized arpeggios, or randomized VCO/note assignements, or...? Just brainstorming. Enough! -- john ----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrew Scheidler" <xpandrew@ph.k12.in.us> To: <SynthModules@yahoogroups.com> Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 9:53 AM Subject: [SynthModules] PSIM musings > The quantizin' idea is just endless. I was thinking about taking one > voltage in, and having 4 different mapped voltages being produced. The > 4 outputs could go to VCO 1/2/3 (on my 2600) and the 4th output to the > VCF. The first 3 could be notes of various chords. So as you swept the > input voltage up 0-5v, it would produce a sequence of chords from the > VCOs along with a changing filter freq. You could setup dozens of > different chords to be used in a track, then use the single voltage > output of a step sequencer to "call up" the chords. Or S/H in, or off a > keyboard... just mind boggling :) > > Andrew >
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Re: [SynthModules] PSIM musings
2004-03-18 by john mahoney
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