A bit of droney ambientish stuff this time around, with audio from VCV Rack. Video is clips generated with Visions of Chaos, and processed with Acid Cam. The VCV patch is available from the usual place.

Noise Therapy: Session 028

A bit of droney ambientish stuff this time around, with audio from VCV Rack. Video is clips generated with Visions of Chaos, and processed with Acid Cam.http…

This isn’t really audio-related, but I figure there’s likely to be some crossover between folks who like what I do here, and folks who are into this kind of thing: I recently had a piece selected for a glitch art exhibition taking place this coming September, called Glitch Art is Dead.

Glitch art is dead

Glitch art is dead, Granite Falls, MN, United States. 3,538 likes ยท 21 talking about this. Glitch art is dead project is an attempt to find the place for digital art in the material world and to…

If this kind of thing does interest you, you may also like to check out my DeviantArt page. I haven’t been posting there much lately, but there is more stuff on the way.

This one’s a bit late due to my family being evacuated from our home this past week due to a nearby forest fire. We are home and safe now, thankfully.

Video is footage from the Doom engine game Shrine II, processed with Acid Cam. Audio is noise from VCV Rack. The VCV patch is available from the patches page.

Noise Therapy: Session 27

This one’s a bit late due to my family being evacuated from our home this past week due to a nearby forest fire. We are home and safe now, thankfully.Video i…

Way back in the days of Windows 95, there was a little program called Sound Raider that crawled your hard drive looking for .wav files, and played them at random speeds in 4 different channels. This program has long since disappeared, and wouldn’t work on modern systems anyway for various reasons, security issues among them. This is an attempt to recreate the functionality as much as possible with VCV, and includes some added features as well.

The patch uses 4 Voxglitch Wav Bank modules, each triggered from a clock divider that can be clocked from either the first LFO, a dedicated LFO, or a random source. The patch and the samples used in the demo can be downloaded from the Patches page.

VCV Rack – Sound Raider VCV

Way back in the days of Windows 95, there was a little program called Sound Raider that crawled your hard drive looking for .wav files, and played them at ra…

Audio from VCV Rack, video is footage from Mechwarrior 5 and Garrison: Archangel, combined using compositing in Kdenlive, and further processed with Acid Cam.

The VCV patch, and a list of used modules, is available here.

Noise Therapy: Session 026

Audio from VCV Rack, video is footage from Mechwarrior 5 and Garrison: Archangel, combined using compositing in Kdenlive, and further processed with Acid Cam…

Just for fun, I recently made a patch in VCV Rack that (sort of) recreates my DIY hardware modular setup. I thought some others might have fun with it too, so the patch can be downloaded from the Synth Patches page. The name “Phoenix” comes from the fact that the hardware version uses parts from a dead ESQ-1. The original hardware is mostly simple circuits, and this VCV version isn’t exactly the same. For example, the original lacks V/Oct scaling for CV inputs. I tried to find modules that were most similar to what’s in the hardware, and thanks to the Lunetta Modula stuff, that section is mostly spot-on. There are also some effects sends that mimic the setup I use in the mixer section. Here’s a demo video:

VCV Rack – “Virtual Phoenix” patch

This patch is an attempt to recreate my DIY hardware modular setup in VCV Rack. The name “Phoenix” comes from the fact that the hardware version uses parts f…