I set out to make video about a lot of the cool stuff we were discussing in the fold unit thread today. I really did. I still plan to do that.
But alas, the ER-301 pulled me in a different direction. I think some may find this useful, and I wanted to document it for myself as well.
This video shows how to set the ER-301 to use a sample player as a lookup table, and use that to quantize to a user defined scale for an oscillatorās pitch. I also add some note probability to it, change the root key, and add some octave offsets.
Brilliant! Was thinking on a solution to scale quantization over my vacation but hadnāt fully worked it out yet. Happy to see this! And youāre absolutely correct that many miles can be found in your approach.
Thanks. I think the ER-301 is reaching that point where if you want to do something with it and donāt think you canā¦ have you really thought hard enough about it?
Something I thought about after making the video. No reason you couldnāt just record yourself a chromatic scale, and use it over and over - just put in slices at the notes you want to include. Pretty flexible that way - you could change which values are included on the fly without making a new lookup table recording.
really great video! i use my mungo w0 oscillator like that, it loads arbitrary waveforms so you could load such a scale, put frequency to 0 and input your pitch cv into the phase modulation and this gives you a quantized pitch cv out. i assume we will see a proper wavetable oscillator and maybe with phase control this approach can work a little easier than your slicing. still, brilliant idea and video @Joe!
Thanks! So, I think in the part where Iām fiddling with the gain of the chain affecting the slice parameter of the sample player, maybe I just needed a final slice at the very end of the buffer, and then I could have set the gain to 1.0 with 0.0 bias. I tried that and it seems to work as expectedā¦
Yeah, I think the ER-301 will continue to get better and better and easier to use. For now, in a way, Iām kind of enjoying what limits it does have. Itās helping me build my modular chops to have to think of ways to do things with whatās there, if that makes sense.
In a way, the probability thing might be the more interesting part of the experiment. It just occurred to me when I was in there slicing. That definitely merits some further exploration!
Just a hint on the random note selection: the White Noise unit outputs in the range of -1 to 1, so half of your random values are below zero. All those negative values will choose slice 0 making it occur more often than not. The solution is either to rectify or push the bias up to 0.5, with gain of 0.5, so that your WN+SH subchain is outputting values in the range of 0 to 1.
Watched this last night but promptly fell asleep hehe - not a reflection on your video but just how tired I was
This is amazing, great work!!
Awesome to see someone finally got round to trying this, I admit I totally forgot but we did discuss it earlier this year, as you say thereās loads of things could be done with this, hereās the thread, maybe it will trigger a few more ideas:
Iām not in front of my modular at the moment, Joe, but I believe that if you hold shift down when you slice, you get the inverse of what ever your āslice at zero crossingā setting is set to in the config menu!
Fascinating concept. What action is it that defines which sample plays from the lookup table? The CV value of noise at the S&H unit is used to play whichever sample as the nearest discrete value? A discrete value is a voltage value? Geez I think Iām gonna have to read theory and lots of it, but, what a great demo and incentive to learn.
Yes, the slice parameter is determining which slice of the sample will be played upon receiving the next gate. When the (now called) Variable Speed Player has itās address mode set to index, it will evenly divide the slice slider across the number of slices. So say your sample has 4 slices, these values would select the corresponding slices.
1.0 as a concept, is not 1. 1.0 is actually a big field, especially when tied to 0. This is probably the most profound math concept I need to fully understand inside the realms of the 301. I saw you do something the other day with 1.0 which first prompted me to question the importance of a number (1.0) unlike (1)
If only there was a useful on line translator into which I could ask what I couldnāt express and you could reply with understanding!
A conventional quantizer will structure the signal applied to its input. The quantizer you built triggers a sample which is an audio slice. The slice is the recorder note from a particular voice. Could I feed a different voice signal through this quantizer and have it structured in the conventional way, I donāt think so. If I wanted to apply that scale to a different voice then I would have to record that particular voice, those particular notes. Is that right?
This is where you went slightly wrong. The only thing making sound in Joeās video is a Sine Oscillator. The sample player does not generate sound here. The sample player is only providing the pitch CV. He recorded the pitch CV (not the tone) into a sample buffer, sliced it, and then used the slicing mechanism to discretize (i.e. quantize) a continuous pitch CV input signal.
If you look in the comments under the YouTube video, you can also read Joeās reply to another person who had the same misunderstanding 9 months ago.
Keep in mind that the ER-301 is not able to output the quantized signal to the rest of your modular because its outputs can only generate audio signals.
I would also add that this video was from back on (I think) v 0.2.x firmware. I think this technique is still valid for creating some kind of probabilistic CV source out of a set of discrete values. But in 0.4.04, Scala file support was added to the Scale Quantizer unit. So if your goal is to āquantize to any scaleā, thatās the simplest, most straightforward way to do it now.
Right, understood. This 301 has a 0.4 revision. Think though Iām gonna step back from this one, let the seed germinate, and in the meantime build a harmonic oscillator Joe and look at custom units in the admin room