Yep, that's correct about the Juno 60. There are people still sharing WAV files of the original factory patches which is cool to be able to re-load now and again.
This is great work and a really nice take on the concept. As someone else said, midi output would be really cool as this is a great just doodley scratchpad but once you have something great it'd be awesome to build on…
I agree that maps, looking up locations etc is the one ingrained Google-user pattern that always leads me to a weird dead end and has me popping back over to google for JUST that query. I don't know if there's a toggle…
The idea of noodling around in the Fairlight UI is pretty fun. Always nice to get an insight on how various limitations or structures of older instruments led to the music they created.
Nothing beats just getting your hands dirty. This video actually does a great job of covering the basics that are common to 99% of synths, physical or virtual: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfJ9Dbjz6cs
Yep, that's correct about the Juno 60. There are people still sharing WAV files of the original factory patches which is cool to be able to re-load now and again.
This is great work and a really nice take on the concept. As someone else said, midi output would be really cool as this is a great just doodley scratchpad but once you have something great it'd be awesome to build on…
I agree that maps, looking up locations etc is the one ingrained Google-user pattern that always leads me to a weird dead end and has me popping back over to google for JUST that query. I don't know if there's a toggle…
The idea of noodling around in the Fairlight UI is pretty fun. Always nice to get an insight on how various limitations or structures of older instruments led to the music they created.
Nothing beats just getting your hands dirty. This video actually does a great job of covering the basics that are common to 99% of synths, physical or virtual: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfJ9Dbjz6cs