It's called the overtone series. The fundamental is not an overtone. In music composition, a harmonic is thought of as an instruction replete with specific notation. Most people confuse this.
Glad you made this video. Its an excellent technical discussion of the module and the theory behind it. I was surprised that it was almost 9 minutes of talking, with very few audio examples of what this thing actually does to recognizable input. Pardon the mangle of a well known phrase, "Talking about sound is like dancing about architecture".
Just an FYI, the German name Bode is pronounced like 'bo-duh.' (my favorite Bode-inspired tool is the Sonic Charge Echobode plugin---great for psychedelic percussion and metallic piano & brass)
@DisciplinedCommotion If I understand the question correctlly ... The outputs will usually have an audible difference in frequency. The (in)harmonic profile will remain the same as you play different notes, if you are 1) using exponential "scale" (1v/octave tracking) and 2) sending the same keyboard control voltage to both the external VCO (Program) and the internal VCO (Carrier). If you (externally) mix the original signal with the Frequency Shifter output, the original signal will be unchanged, but the Frequency Shifter output will remain the same. This probably all sounds like "double speak". Hang with me until Part 2, when I go into the seven different applications. There are so many options, it can get complicated to discuss. Feel free to re-ask the question after you've seen Part 2.
Excellent tutorial, buddy! You've just earned yourself another subscriber.
Thanks @cefngwyn ! Part 2 should be out in about a week.
Great explanation O.Z. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Martin!
It's called the overtone series. The fundamental is not an overtone. In music composition, a harmonic is thought of as an instruction replete with specific notation. Most people confuse this.
Thanks for the clarification. Here's a discussion which uses both terminologies ruclips.net/video/-8nn8hb0H8o/видео.htmlsi=T3YYB7r1jMSgkYIX&t=230
Glad you made this video. Its an excellent technical discussion of the module and the theory behind it. I was surprised that it was almost 9 minutes of talking, with very few audio examples of what this thing actually does to recognizable input. Pardon the mangle of a well known phrase, "Talking about sound is like dancing about architecture".
Lots of examples in part 2 coming w/in a week.
Just an FYI, the German name Bode is pronounced like 'bo-duh.' (my favorite Bode-inspired tool is the Sonic Charge Echobode plugin---great for psychedelic percussion and metallic piano & brass)
Did I pronounce it correctly when I said the whole name "Harald Bode"? (c. 0:35 in the video)
great work again OZ. I was wondering if you were going to get one of these for your collection. A really interesting piece of gear. Cheers
Yes. I got mine a couple of weeks ago. I knew almost nothing about how to use this “bit of kit” prior to researching for this video.
now everybody has a better understanding. thanks for all your research. Cheers@@ozhalljr
Btw, this module meets the Ring Modulator requirement that I listed in my 5 missing features video.
This gives me some hope that they have not abandoned the 55 series project. Lets hope they put out some other missing pieces.@@ozhalljr
Cheers Tony!
Thank you for the video, forgive me, so am I right in thinking the pitch of the note stays the same?
@DisciplinedCommotion If I understand the question correctlly ... The outputs will usually have an audible difference in frequency. The (in)harmonic profile will remain the same as you play different notes, if you are
1) using exponential "scale" (1v/octave tracking) and
2) sending the same keyboard control voltage to both the external VCO (Program) and the internal VCO (Carrier).
If you (externally) mix the original signal with the Frequency Shifter output, the original signal will be unchanged, but the Frequency Shifter output will remain the same.
This probably all sounds like "double speak". Hang with me until Part 2, when I go into the seven different applications. There are so many options, it can get complicated to discuss.
Feel free to re-ask the question after you've seen Part 2.
ruclips.net/video/ZyEo2qj8ctg/видео.html
Great tutorial video. thx.