Hey, man! Unsure why it took me so long to navigate to this tendril of your musical prowess, but here I am, enjoying it in all it's glory. You have always inspired me with your music, and I am yet again thrown into the familiar state of mind that "Long Run EP" induced years ago. I'd better get writing. So glad to see you are well and creating. Your friend, Connor
I recently got a Peak and your videos using it have been so inspiring to me. Have you ever thought of offering any tutorials to help others learn this beautiful (but overwhelming) instrument? You use it so well!
I'm probably going to do a video at some point walking through my whole setup since it allows me to do some fun things with sequencing that people may be interested in. Maybe it'll lead to a tutorial series? Honestly I'm a little hesitant to try to explain too much-- feel like I learn something new with each one of these which may mean I still have a long way to go before I really understand this thing. But I'm really glad that the videos have been inspiring. It's a wonderful instrument.
No pressure either way! If it feels right, go for it. I learn so much from following along with others. Maybe a patch from scratch video. Where you start with initialized patch and just do your thing. Your sounds/videos are just so dreamy. Keep creating and sharing what’s in your heart.
Gorgeous! Are oscillators 1 and 2 fixed and then you have a sequence into 3? The voice you’ve got for 3 is so warm and lovely, is it the granular one? I could listen to this for hours. 😊
Thank you very much for listening. This patch and seq are actually simpler than they seem-- All three oscs are just holding a sustained chord for the duration. The sequenced sound comes from modulation of osc3's wavetable position with LFOs (jumping up and down an octave due to position in the wavetable), and that's why the sound of the "sequence" changes as I change the rate of LFO 2. I was also manually switching osc3 to a lower octave at various points. As far as wave shapes, I'm pretty sure it was just osc 1 sine, osc 2 pulse, osc 3 saw. And then generous filtering.
Dreamy and mesmerizing. Beautiful jam, it’s really soothing and peaceful.
Hey, man! Unsure why it took me so long to navigate to this tendril of your musical prowess, but here I am, enjoying it in all it's glory. You have always inspired me with your music, and I am yet again thrown into the familiar state of mind that "Long Run EP" induced years ago. I'd better get writing. So glad to see you are well and creating.
Your friend, Connor
Really good to hear from you as always my friend. Always appreciate your thoughts on what I'm doing.
love these dreamy tones, ........nuanced, exotic..............so ephemeral..................awesome upload.............................
Thank you
I recently got a Peak and your videos using it have been so inspiring to me. Have you ever thought of offering any tutorials to help others learn this beautiful (but overwhelming) instrument? You use it so well!
I'm probably going to do a video at some point walking through my whole setup since it allows me to do some fun things with sequencing that people may be interested in. Maybe it'll lead to a tutorial series? Honestly I'm a little hesitant to try to explain too much-- feel like I learn something new with each one of these which may mean I still have a long way to go before I really understand this thing. But I'm really glad that the videos have been inspiring. It's a wonderful instrument.
No pressure either way! If it feels right, go for it. I learn so much from following along with others. Maybe a patch from scratch video. Where you start with initialized patch and just do your thing. Your sounds/videos are just so dreamy. Keep creating and sharing what’s in your heart.
@@communityoflearnerswould love a set up / tutorial video
🖤🖤🖤
This is so beautiful.
You are why I have and use my Peak!
Definitely one of the nicest things I've been told about these recordings. Thank you.
Gorgeous! Are oscillators 1 and 2 fixed and then you have a sequence into 3? The voice you’ve got for 3 is so warm and lovely, is it the granular one? I could listen to this for hours. 😊
Thank you very much for listening. This patch and seq are actually simpler than they seem-- All three oscs are just holding a sustained chord for the duration. The sequenced sound comes from modulation of osc3's wavetable position with LFOs (jumping up and down an octave due to position in the wavetable), and that's why the sound of the "sequence" changes as I change the rate of LFO 2. I was also manually switching osc3 to a lower octave at various points. As far as wave shapes, I'm pretty sure it was just osc 1 sine, osc 2 pulse, osc 3 saw. And then generous filtering.
Thanks, really appreciate it ☺@@communityoflearners