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Dandolin wrote:ha, yeah, sorry - I might be [probably am] mixing up pedals and eurorack modules, actually...looks like there's some level of choice over grain shape/envelope in MI Clouds and Beads. Maybe somebody on here who ended up with a Tomkat Cloudy can comment on whether that control is ported to the pedal, and if so, whether it has a substantial effect on the perceived attack/decay characteristics of the grains?
UglyCasanova wrote:The market for glitch is definitely at an all-time-high, but I wouldn't say it's oversaturated just yet. I don't mind more. Bring more. Feed me errors.
gila_crisis wrote:In a way for my needs, the simpler and less feature-loaded a glitch pedal is... the better will it work within my setup.
Dandolin wrote:cool about the infinite jets
i get where you're coming from re: simpler/less feature-loaded, gila_crisis....
whoismarykelly wrote:gila_crisis wrote:In a way for my needs, the simpler and less feature-loaded a glitch pedal is... the better will it work within my setup.
Same for me. Raptio remains my longest running pedal in the genre and the one that I hit the most although the ReVolver II on my live board also gets a ton of action.
thekingofgear wrote:And to continue from the last page, it was very hard to find chips for glitch pedals in 2021. But as whoismarykelly says, glitch pedals are still much easier to get than in the past. Even the DD-8 has a glitch mode after all.
manymanyhaha wrote:I know "glitch" is the sound of a sudden change with a sharp attack and decay but I'm getting much more interested in short random changes that have a very smooth attack and decay. Like more ebb and flow.
Are they any glitch pedals out there that allow for ADSR adjustment?
Edit: After thinking about it, I guess really a random parallel tremolo that ducks the primary signal when active is what I'm after
oldangelmidnight wrote:manymanyhaha wrote:I know "glitch" is the sound of a sudden change with a sharp attack and decay but I'm getting much more interested in short random changes that have a very smooth attack and decay. Like more ebb and flow.
Are they any glitch pedals out there that allow for ADSR adjustment?
Edit: After thinking about it, I guess really a random parallel tremolo that ducks the primary signal when active is what I'm after
This makes me think of the Champion Leccy Kilter. It's two parallel effects loops with a panner to mix them. Lots of waveforms including random slopes for the panner. You can set it so one of the loops doesn't pass signal so it works as a tremolo.
My only complaint is that the panner is on the return, rather than the send. I'd like to set up two effects lines that are receiving signal asynchronously.
whoismarykelly wrote:thekingofgear wrote:And to continue from the last page, it was very hard to find chips for glitch pedals in 2021. But as whoismarykelly says, glitch pedals are still much easier to get than in the past. Even the DD-8 has a glitch mode after all.
I don't know if yall are still using the FV1 but I was working on a contract manufacturing job for 100 pedals with an FV1 in them and we ended up waiting an additional 6 months for delivery of the chips last year. Its was a nightmare sitting on all the other inventory for those products and not being able to get them to the client.
Bartimaeus wrote:whoismarykelly wrote:thekingofgear wrote:And to continue from the last page, it was very hard to find chips for glitch pedals in 2021. But as whoismarykelly says, glitch pedals are still much easier to get than in the past. Even the DD-8 has a glitch mode after all.
I don't know if yall are still using the FV1 but I was working on a contract manufacturing job for 100 pedals with an FV1 in them and we ended up waiting an additional 6 months for delivery of the chips last year. Its was a nightmare sitting on all the other inventory for those products and not being able to get them to the client.
Same here, sad to hear you were caught up by the delays too! I feel like I have to stick with the FV-1, I've spend so much time learning to de-click and optimize it. But last year was really bad for sourcing those chips. We basically had to indefinitely shelf a new pedal idea, and shifted focus to analog stuff. But I guess I'm glad it's still possible to buy the FV-1, unlike STM stuff. Here's hoping it's better this year!
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