Showing posts with label Mutable Instruments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mutable Instruments. Show all posts

Thursday, 19 July 2018

Audio Equalizers

Equalization is a fundamental processes in music production. 
Every music producer should have various types of EQ in their arsenal.
These may be studio based or can be used in live performance rigs.
 
Equalizers are basically filters. They influence the volume of audio at specified frequencies.
Note that the audible frequency spectrum range lies between 20Hz and 20KHz.
There are many types of EQ. The most common are:
parametric, dynamic, graphic, and shelving.
 

Parametric Equalizers



Parametric EQs are the most common and I think the most flexible.
They take many shapes and forms. They can be a digital software plugin, can be part of a mixing console, or be a hardware device.

Parametric EQs all have common controls.
Frequency, Resonance or bandwidth (Q) , Gain, Filter type, Filter Slope.
 
 
(the left pic is of Abelton's EQ8)



Dynamic

These combine an equalizer with a compressor.
They can cut or boost frequencies depending on the amplitude of the signal at its input.
A traditional EQ is static. Dynamic EQ combines equalization with selective compression/expansion and sidechain triggers. It kicks in only when the signal you’re EQing goes above certain threshold which you pick. 
 

Graphic Equalizers

These boost or attenuate a range of fixed frequencies using a bank of evenly spaced slider controls.
You can have up to 31 of these. The more sliders, the more accurate they are.
However, the frequencies are fixed and you have no control over the filter shape or bandwidth.

Shelving Equalizers.

These are very basic EQs which  boost or attenuate frequencies above or below a specified cutoff point.
Most shelving equalizers have high and low shelving filters like in the Shelves module below.
 

Filter types & Slope:

The most common types are Bell, Bandpass, notch, High Shelf & Low Shelf.
We can also add High Cut & Low Cut to this list.
Abelton's EQ 8 is a great equalizer and a great way to explore these filter types.
 
EQ 8 has 8 parametric filters. Each filter can be one of 8 types.
 
This is a low cut or high pass filter
It passes all high frequencies above the cutoff point.
It's x4 meaning it is 4 pole
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
This is another low cut / HP filter
It has a gentiler slope than the previous one.
 
Use a low cut filter to remove low frequencies or automate the frequency to create sweeping effects.
 







This is a high cut filter. Also known as a Low Pass.
it passes all low frequencies below the cutoff point.
It's fun to automate the frequency to create sweeping effects.

 







This is another LP filter (or high cut)

The 4X indicates a Steeper slope than the previous filter.









This is a Notch filter. Also sometimes referred to as a Band Stop.

It attenuates and removes a range of frequencies around a specified
center frequency point. It will pass all the other frequencies unaltered.
Modulating notch filters creates interesting shaping effects.
It's the opposite of a bandpass filter.







This is a bandpass filter.
This has been made using a LP & HP filter. 
Low and high frequencies outside the range are attenuated or cut..
Multiband equalizers often use multiple band pass filters to divide the audio spectrum into sections.



Here we have two bell filters. They are also known as peak filters. Use them to boost or reduce a range of frequencies with precision. 
The bandwidth/resonance (Q) sets the width of the bell curve.
 
 
 

These are two shelf filters 
On the left is a left shelf.
On the right we have a right shelf filter.
These are useful for boosting or reducing certain frequencies without totally cutting them out as you would have if you used a LP/HP filter combo.
 
 
You can make the filter slope less steep by dragging down the Q knob, or do the opposite by reducing gain.
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Enough theory.

Here are some of my favorite Equalizers
 
The Cwejman VCEQ-3
 This is in Eurorack format.
The vceq-3 consists of 3 individual parametric equalizers.
 
 the frequency, bandwidth and amplitude can be controlled by dedicated knobs and/or by external signals, individually for each band.
 

















Serge Resonant Equalizer CGS
Serge Resonant EQ/Filter - Euro format (CGS 202)
 
 It's a a comb filter based module. There is no CV control, but it has 10 bands of frequency to mix. The frequencies are fixed. It's closer to a Graphic Equalizer in design.

There is no control over the filter shape and bandwidth of each band. 


Below is a pic of a vintage Serge Res equaliser.
 
It's the 3rd module from the left. It's very compact in comparison to the Euro version and doesn't have
the extra outs from the 10 filter bands. And pot's are used instead for sliders.
 
 

 

Roland 100m 174 module
 
It's a really simple but beautiful module. 
The 4 channel EQ  has  independent level, bandwidth and frequency controls that span a wide frequency spectrum from 20 Hz all the way up to 20 kHz. 
 
Using the two outputs of this section, you can then patch signals to two different modules for some extra modulation and waveform sculpting possibilities and even switch between EQ’d and Bypass modes for a quick comparison.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Mutable Instruments Shelves
4 Channels.
It's a mix of  low-shelf, high-shelf, and parametric sections.
All share the same control ranges and scales
 
All channels have frequency & gain controls.
The middle two channels have resonance (q) controls.
These are the parametric sections. 

The first band is a low-pass shelving filter & the fourth band a high-pass shelving filter
 
 





The good old Doepfer 128 filter bank.
 
(Fixed Filter Bank) is a filter bank, made up of 15 parallel band pass filters, all with fixed middle frequencies and bandwidth (50 Hz / 75Hz / 110Hz / 150Hz / 220Hz / 350Hz / 500Hz / 750Hz / 1.1kHz / 1.6kHz / 2.2kHz / 3.6kHz / 5.2kHz / 7.5kHz / 11 kHz).
Each band pass filter has its own amplitude control knob
 
If you want to add a single audio output for each filter we have instructions for this modification available
 

Doepfer 128 - Fixed filter bank modifications

 

 

 

L1 Quad VC Resonant EQ
4 channels of Parametric EQ 

Also first band is switchable to LP mode and fourth band to HP to make low and high shelves. Also each band is switchable to boost or cut modes. Every parameter has voltage control, also master CV ins for all bands
 


 

 





Doepfer A 104
Trautonium Formant Filter
 
This was used in the Mixtur Trautonium by Oskar Sala. It is made of four parallel resonance filters, each filter can be switched to low pass or band pass or off.  

There is no VC.
Frequency, Q & Vol are all manually controlled.









Its a graphic EQ
Music Thing Modular
A compact, clean seven band Eurorack graphic equaliser inspired 
by the classic Boss GE-7 pedal.

 

Mutable Instruments Links

Some pics of a new build ... a DIY version of the Mutable links module.
 There is no microcontroller in this module so I though its would be a good one to start experimenting on. Before soldering the jacks I pondered which side of the PCB do they go on. ???
A friend assured me this was the correct side, however once the jacks are on, any trouble shooting would be extremely difficult as the components are on the same side.
 Anyway, I pressed ahead.
All the SMDs are 0603

 There, really is no reason why you can't solder the jacks on the other side....except the panel would be reversed.

+ Mutable instruments - flashing firmware

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For more Euro DIY builds click here:
http://djjondent.blogspot.com.au/2017/12/diy-index.html
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Monday, 2 January 2017

Braids - Chords

Making chords in a eurorack modular is really difficult
It at the most basic level requires 3 VCOs, a filter, VCA and EG


Mutable Instruments Braids has a number of modes that approximate chords, though there is no official chord mode

X3 mode is a good place to start
There are four variations of this mode

 /| /| x 3 mode  is 3 saw waves with individual tuning.
This mode is I think inspired by past synths like the miniMoog, EMS synthi, the electrocomp 101, etc. The saw waves can be tuned independently giving pseudo chords.

nn_X3 ... three square waves
The tuning of three oscillators is tied to the Coarse knob & Timbre knob.
By turning the timbre & Color knob, two of those oscillators can be detuned above or below the central tuning of the primary oscillator.
These two controls are quantized to “snap” on musical intervals like octaves or fifths.

 
 
/\X3.... three triangle waves

SIX3...... Three sine waves

/|/|/|/| ....... 7 super saws detuned

--------------------
The second pseudo-chord mode is the WTX4 mode
WTX4 is the wavetable times four page.
This mode is a 4-voice variant of the WLIN mode.

TIMBRE morphs through a small selection of 16 waves.
COLOR selects the harmonic structures between the 4 voices - from a predefined set of chords.
When COLOR is at 7 o’clock, all voices are playing the same note with a variable amount
of detuning, creating a thick chorus effect.


This is a great manual with the impt chord table for this mode.
http://www.vo1t.com/Euro//BraidsIllustrated1.8.pdf



There are a few variations in the original braids firmware which add extra chord modes.
Renaissance is a great place to start.
https://synthmodes.com/modules/braids_renaissance/#info

Monday, 12 December 2016

Mutable Instruments - Clouds - drones - chords

Clouds is a great module to use for creating drones & chords.
 
 
Use Granular synthesis mode
First mode. 
You need to input a steady note, and then it's just a very quick sequence that transposes the pitch of the grains
 
Used the quantized output of the a sequencer.... a Rene for example.
program on each row four notes that form a chord.
Limit it to a C major scale, for example.
You can then turn the knobs freely on the sequencer and create chords on the fly. 
My Clouds tracks quite well 1v/Oct.
 
Links

Saturday, 17 October 2015

DIY - Eurorack

This page is my index for all Eurorack related DIY.
It includes build notes, hacks, etc

GENERAL
+ Small Euro drum - version 1

Barton Musical Circuits (BMC).
+ BMC 037 - EuroBuffer (Buffered Multiple)
+ BMC - FM Drum - build notes

Bastl


Beast-Tek
 + Microbe 
 + Pixel Drum 

Befaco

Cat Full Of Ghosts
 
CGS
* Serge Resonant EQ/Filter - Euro format (CGS 202)
 

Division 6
+ Dual Sequencer

Doepfer
+ module 128 modification - Fixed filter bank

Duskwork

+ Faderbank -16n 
 
Greyscale

hEXINVERTER

Ian Fritz
 
Klee Sequencer

L1

Liquid Foam
 
Ljunggren Audio


LZX Video Industries
 + Function Generator - build pics & notes

LZX - Cadet
 + Cadet I - Video Sync Generator - Build notes
 + Cadet II - RGB Encoder - Build notes
 + Cadet III - Video input - build notes
 + Cadet IV - Dual Ramp generator - build notes
 + Cadet V - Scaler - build notes
 + Cadet VI - Fader - Build notes
 + Cadet VII - Processor -Build notes
 + Cadet VIII - Hard Key Generator - build notes
 + Cadet IX - VCO - build notes
 + Cadet X - Multiplier - Build notes

LZX - Castle
Introduction
00_000 ADC - Analog to digital converter
01_001 DAC - Digital to Analog converter
02_010 Clock VCO
03_011 Shift Register
04_100 Multi Gate
05_101 Quad Gate
06_110 Counter
07_111 Flip flops

Manhattan Analog
  + CVP (Control Voltage Processor)

 + Voltage memory - Meng Qi - build notes

Metromodular


 MI
+ Mutable Instruments - Grids Hack for clock & random gate.
+ Links - DIY build pics 

MFOS (Music from Outer Space)
+ Bi-polar Power supply

Music Thing Modular
 
Neutral Labs
 
NLC - Non Linear Circuits:
        + All NLC pages are here  
 
Ornament & Crime - O_C


Snazzy Effects
+ ArdCore -Installation Demo


Sonic Potions
 
ST-Modular


Steiner-Parker
Steiner-Parker MicroCon Voice - Eurorack - Build notes

SynthroTek  
 
 
 
 Westlicht

Zlob
Minimixer
Dual VCA
Dual VCO
Clock divider
Zlob SVF (State Variable Filter) - build notes

Mutable Instruments Grids - hack - adding clock & Random gate

It's Sat afternoon and we are feeling pretty good ...having each just consumed half a Kangaroo and two bottles of red wine.
The wine on the right is a 1990 vintage port from Steins in Mudgee NSW. If I remember correctly, they have a fabulous motorcycle museum there.


And on the left is a Tollana Cabernet Sav from 1995. (Eden Valley, South Australia). Both excellent wines !!!

In such a frame of mind there seems nothing better to do than hack a perfectly good Mutable Instruments
module.

Paul (Cobramatic) tells me it's a easy one and he won't even hold me responsible if I mess it up :-)

He must have really liked the wine I served.

Anyway, it turned out to be dead simple and I highly recommend this if you own a MI Grids.


There are 3 points on the back of the module: Random Gate, Clock & Ground.
Solder  a wire to each and the other ends to two jacks.
The ground of course is shared by both jacks.


Deciding where to mount the jacks is a bit tricky ... Lots of SMD components .... decided to place them
between the bottom two jacks on the left.

There you go!

We now have two new outputs ... for clock and random gate. Very useful.

..
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For more Euro DIY builds click here:
http://djjondent.blogspot.com.au/2017/12/diy-index.html
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