Some more Woggle Bug tips
2007-10-17 by Grant Richter
I have been meaning to post this. The "Woggle CV" output jack can produce audio rate tones when the "Woggle Time" setting is small or zero. At small settings of "Woggle Time", the Woggle CV ouput produces a decaying sinusoid in the audible range. If you lowpass filter it, you can get the plucked bass tones heard in the original Woggle Bug demo. At zero settings, the Woggle CV will oscillate strangely and produce harsh tones which vary with the settings of the other controls. So the Woggle CV outputs at some settings can be used as the 9th and 10th audio outputs from the module. The correspondence between the Model 265 Source of Uncertainty functions and the identical Woggle Bug functions: 265 SOU label Woggle Bug label Random Voltage Outputs Smooth CVs Probable Rate of Change controls LFO Rate controls Pob. Rate of Change Ext. jack Rate input jack Stored Random Voltage Outputs Step CVs Pulse Inputs Step CV Clock inputs Correlation Controls Clustering controls The original Model 265 Source of Uncertainty functions are all present and identical in the Woggle Bug but have been enhanced by the addition of: Smooth Range Woggle Range Woggle Time Out 1 and 2 Disturb CV 1 and 2 Child Tones 3 and 4 LFO outputs Smooth Tone outputs Woggled Tone outputs Woggled CV outputs More info on the original Model 265 Source of Uncertainty module is at: http://www.musicsynthesizer.com/Buchla/source_of_uncertainty.htm Have Fun!