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Further down the same rabbit hole is to build your own as its way cheaper and focusses you in on what you want not how marketing feeds your gas or whats on e bay etc.
I find using all the existing options on things like minibrute , Se02 , putting audio signals through them, including guitars....and linking them up is just as satisfying. In the context of guitar, it just acts as a oscillator/audio source.
Sell on wise, its singles pretty much as rigs tend to be very personal things.
A copy of NI reaktor is also a brilliant way of learning modular synthesis/fx in the box and loads of freebies, online stuff to keep anyone going for hundreds of years.
Go very slowly and try and visualise your rack and use modular grid to find out what you need to do to expand upon your goal. I spent 2 - 3 years thinking about it first. It's OK to just want modules because they are shiny but to open this up you need lot of modulation and utility which takes thought and research.
You are making a personal instrument that only exists for you. If you think pinging 5 filters at the same time is a concept you are into do that or want an fm drone machine with effects then you can build that. Or a field recorder with manipulation that has drum patterns that can be manipulated by random CV based on the recordings you can. Making a poly synth is expensive and not ideal and making a fully featured drum machine would be so expensive and limited compared to a 500 quid hardware one. When mine is 'done' it will have 2 filter banks in it sending cv to each other - chaos that then can be controlled via more utility costs for changing scenes if you will. Euroack demos are much harder to follow unless you already have/understand euroack than say most guitar pedal demos.
If you want a 'musical' instrument set up then get a poly synth that can do chords and a midi drum machine with a mono for bass and some external effects. Musically more trad and rewarding and cheaper but still expansive. A premium loaded 7u with 1u can easily be 2 - 4 grand. It is also aimed at people that want to get completly away from DAWS but can be integrated in clever ways. If melody is the goal a keyboard would be much better for you. Alot of the hardware euro sequencers end up being like a computer anyway or are very esoteric and experimental that you have to go along with it and try not to wrangle to your wants.
Too many euroacks setups end up being virtually identical overly stuffed with voices and the same 10 modules. But if you can afford to spend a load of money and spend lots of time and want to learn on the way just scrstch the itch and don't let the interest be stunted. It may spark interest in other areas you haven't thought of. Nothing needs to be permanent and if you find making sounds interesting you won't be dissapointed. It will make you approach synthesis in a different way but having a grasp of all the basic stuff before will make for a better expiernence and system. There is so many good affordable semi modular synths out there and always easy to move on. Shifting euroack gear is not as easy as pedals and synths arguably.
I like making dystopia driven harsh noise music with lots of random events which would be impossible on trad synths. I also do just love all lights and the towers of gear makes me feel good!
I know the shiny, warm glow of a rack will get me gassing bad - and some of the sound scapes I hear are amazing. Its mostly a time issue that concerns me -> I need to practise 1hr on guitar each day, do I have time to tweak (and tune) a eurorack???
And I don't have a cat.
Ha to caviate ha I don't know what I'm doing. Just lots of research and YouTube and helped me break down some of the chat in modwiggler.
I initially started with a grandmother and the moog three tier. I also up my intellijel with the input modules so I can play other synths straight in.
Wow you already have some fantastic stuff.
I would suggest annetuatirs, switches, LFOs and a a 4x vca. You might want to mix out side the case as they take up alot room in the case also a voice that you don't have or just a load of effects.In terms of time spent ha ya a bit of a pit but a good one. Ha I don't have your patience for practice the cables are calling mate!
Just go for it - I started with a 4u 104hp ha filled up quick! Ha yes the bigger the better before you know it you've sold your non existent cat.
I have been on quite a long syntheszier journey since around 2007....it all started with roland sp 808, then the novation xiosynth....
About 9-10 years ago I jumped into eurorack and started with a handful of Make Noise modules, I had no idea what I was getting into, I just knew I wanted to try it out as a friend had introduced me to it, I bought everything on finance and my first eurorack case was made out of carboard.
Fast forward to 2023 and I now have a 168HP, 9U doepfer case that is full. I have spent around £10,000 on it including the doepfer case.
Im now at a point where I barely use it as it's just so overwhelming, I think I need to refocus it and maybe break it down into a smaller system.
I think you should seriously reconsider getting into eurorack if you're not 100% dead certain about what you want from it otherwise you'll end up with an expensive paperweight/ornament that you might not use very much.
Having said that, it's probably some of the most fun gear you could ever purchase, it's just these days I have gone in a different direction with the kind of music I like to play and noodle around with/record.
I would definitely go 2nd hand, I have had some ridiculously cheap bargains over the years buying off reverb and ebay.
If I was to do it all again I would start with AMsynths and dreadbox modules as they offer the most bang for the pound.
Any questions at all just shoot me a PM.
I would think about that is it you want to do that hardware synths and/or guitar pedals do not cover.
If you can’t think of anything then don’t do it.
Obligatory pic:
https://i.imgur.com/9Fz6fnq.jpg
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
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Or I could try and play guitar better ...
I would start with the basics and keep it simple unless you wanted to start with a couple of more complex modules.
I always found that to utilise more feature dense modules, I needed more modules to feed it to and things got too complex and out of hand relatively quickly.
I started with this system back in August 2018.
The idea was to build a Minimoog cheaper than buying an original or a reissue.
I would have saved myself about £30k if I'd just bought the Minimoog and never ventured into modular.
But it isn't about the money and perhaps it is a hard thing to communicate in words but there is an approach with modular that surpasses any other mode of operation.
It is hands-on but it is also 'brain in'.
I achieve a flow state working with my modular systems (the picture is only one of the modular systems I have- although it is the largest) far easier than I do working with fixed architecture hardware synths or in a DAW with soft synths.
This might sound pretentious but you have to be open to indeterminacy as a compositional process when using a modular.
Precisely recreating patches it very time consuming and sometimes impossible.
There are so many possibilities and the position of a single potentiometer or a single patch can drastically change the patch.
So creating a patch with the mindset of it being a 'one off', never to be heard again is quite freeing (as long as you record the bloody thing).
In terms of 'too big too soon'- how knowledgeable are you about synthesis?
I don't mean 'how many synths have you used?'
If I stuck you in front of a synthesiser (either software or hardware) and said 'create a subtractive monophonic moog-style bass', could you do it?
What about a pad?
Or a brass sound?
Or a snare?
Do you know what a VCA does?
Or an LFO?
How about an envelope?
If you don't know the difference on a technical level between all of those sounds then one you get to modular it will be like sitting in front of a typewriter, randomly bashing at the keys and then presenting 'your creation'.
Is it original?
Sure.
Does it mean anything? Well... that is up for debate.
Before I get people piling in objecting to this firstly it is an opinion, not a fact, and secondly I am not saying 'don't do it'.
It is just that getting from nothing to something in modular is more time consuming than any other way even when you know synthesis pretty well. It is really easy to go from nothing to nothing as well. I mean- if you can't create a basic subtractive synth patch then when you sit in front of a modular and nothing is patched... how do you make it go?
You can learn synthesis by starting with modular and it does suit some people to do so.
It is just a long road.
Many people making EDM/Techno/House don't really know this stuff.
They aren't creating original sounds- they use soft synths and go preset shopping.
I'm also not objecting to them doing that- the tools allow you to do it.
The analogy I use is we are all trying to build a house.
Fixed architecture synths and soft synths are different flavours of 'buying the bricks'.
You buy the bricks, then you start to stack them and eventually you have a house.
Modular is *making the bricks*... one by one.
You make a brick, exactly as you want it and you set it aside.
You make another one.
And another.
etc.
My advice- get VCV rack.
There is a free version or you can buy it for not very much money.
Work with that for a month or so.
If it clicks then build yourself a simple system out of Doepfer modules.
Don't be seduced by fancy faceplates and internet reviews/youtube videos.
Definitely buy used- loads of people get into modular, spend loads of money and then bail.
Why?
Because it is difficult and frustrating if you don't know what you are doing.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
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Some of my most favourite modules are things I bought on a whim.
Music Thing Modular Turing Machine.
Ornament and Crime.
Endorphines Godspeed.
Mutable Instruments Rings.
Mutable Instruments Clouds.
Make Noise Maths.
ADDAC Stochastic Function Generator.
I didn't have much of an idea about what they did before I bought them other than a brief website description but I love them all and they are central to what I do.
You figure it out by doing it and you choose your aesthetic.
Also worth noting that I have 3 or 4 of all of those modules now too.
Whereas other highly regarded modules (say Piston Honda III, Rainmaker, Rene 2, Mutable Plaits) are less interesting to me.
You won't know what works for you until you dive in and that is where it can get expensive.
Esp for me because even if I don't use a module a lot I don't sell it.
I always eventually find a use for them.
Studio: https://www.voltperoctave.com
Music: https://www.euclideancircuits.com
Me: https://www.jamesrichmond.com
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I think it might be helpful to look at videos on youtube that are focused on smaller systems. It will probably only exacerbate the GAS, but it may give you some guidance and an idea on what a few modules can do.
Here's a few example videos:
Tiny Synth - Modular Patching With A Small System - YouTube
3 voices in 62HP including a Mimeophon? SO much potential! - YouTube
An Ordinary Day Full of Imperfections
Mutable Instruments Palette System - YouTube
Planning Your First Eurorack Synthesizer with Sarah Belle Reid - YouTube
Keep posting any questions and thoughts you have!