Комментарии:
first ;)
ОтветитьWith S-1?
ОтветитьBy the way, earlier in the USSR the KGB used SW jammers to jam Western radio stations. These sounds of yours reminded me very much of the past...
ОтветитьIt’s nice. Only if the sound wasn’t always so thin!
ОтветитьMy bytebeat I have a MMXX T-Ape I love this looks up my alley
ОтветитьThere's a yellow sub in my lemonade! Cool little device.
ОтветитьThis is very interesting
ОтветитьSpherical Sound Societie‘s Opera Rotas is a lot of fun and exploration. Juan Carlos is a cool guy and a great inventor.
ОтветитьThis shouldn't be a synth. It should be a CV source, and the knobs should be CV input plugs..
ОтветитьVery nice, great intro 😊👍
Ответитьnice tutorial, i saw you using a mini pc with probably a vst host and valhalla supermassive. but I only saw a USB connection to the mini PC….?…..how do you get the audio in/out….it is out of the picture, but I would like to know please. Greetings
ОтветитьAnother wonderfully bizarre little synth. Great to see these sorts of innovative devices!
Ответитьwhat is that little pc thing?
ОтветитьI love seeing new gear, even if it doesn't gel with me
ОтветитьLove it Floyd!
ОтветитьIt mostly seems like distracting noise
ОтветитьSome cool sounds here. Looks fun
ОтветитьIt’s a great sample source, and a good starting point for DIY’ers who enjoy soldering. All 4 LED’s are clock outputs. Needs a filter/VCF.
ОтветитьI received my unit last week. Amazing. I prefer it in non-recursive mode, at the slow end of the tempo options. I agree that it is an excellent source of noise samples. but more than that, it feels like an interdimensional radio for modem-type connection strings. well done Spherical Sound Society.
ОтветитьWhat are the four instruments used in the video?
ОтветитьIs there a volume control on the Fluorine?
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