Make Noise René User Manual

René
Limited WARRANTY: Make Noise warrants this product to be free of defects in materials or construction for a period of one year from the date of purchase (proof of purchase/invoice required).
Malfunction resulting from wrong power supply voltages, backwards power cable connection, abuse of the product or any other causes determined by Make Noise to be the fault of the user are not covered by this warranty, and normal service rates will apply.
During the warranty period, any defective products will be repaired or replaced, at the option of Make Noise, on a return-to-Make Noise basis, with the customer paying the transit cost to Make Noise. Please contact Make Noise for Return To Manufacturer Authorization.
Make Noise implies and accepts no responsibility for harm to person or apparatus caused through operation of this product.
Please contact technical@makenoisemusic.com with any questions, needs & comments, otherwise... go MAKE NOISE.
http://www.makenoisemusic.com
Installation:
The Make Noise René is an electronic analog control signal generator requiring 80mA of +12V regulated power and properly formatted distribution receptacle to operate. It is designed to be used within the euro format modular synthesizer system.
Go to http://www.doepfer.de/a100_man/a100t_e.htm for the details of this format. To install, find 34HP of space in your eurorack synthesizer system, plug the 16pin power
cable into the eurorack style power distribution board, minding the polarity so that the RED stripe on the cable is oriented to the NEGATIVE 12 volt (12V) supply line. This is USUALLY at the bottom. Please refer to your case manufacturers' specifications for location of the negative supply.
PLEASE contact Make Noise with any questions regarding Powering of René.
Overview:
René is deep, but all you really need to know: Patch one clock to XCLK, and a second clock to Y‐CLK, adjust clock rates and/ or divisors, tune voltages per location (the knobs) as desired. Adjusting those two clocks relative to each other will create seemingly infinite variations on the theme that is your sequence. Much joy may be had without any further knowledge, but I am certain you will want to know more, so read on.
René is the world's first and only Cartesian Sequencer for music synthesizers. Named for the French philosopher & mathematician René Descartes, it uses his cartesian coordinate system to unlock the analog step sequencer from the shackles of linearity. Like the classic analog sequencers, there are only 16 steps on René, each having an associated knob with which the note for that step is tuned. However, using René the patterns are not limited to 16 steps in length because the path taken through those steps is, for all practical purposes, infinite. In fact, René does not “step” at all, but rather it maps coordinates to locations in a grid, and because if this, it is possible to move in ways that you would never imagine a step sequencer to move. For this reason, we call the 16 steps on René “LOCATIONS,” and rather than one Clock input there are two; one each for the XAxis, and the YAxis.
The primary goal of this sequencer is to have a maximum amount of artist controlled musical variation, with a minimum amount of data input. There are no menus, ALL editing is done realtime, and thus, the ProGraMming of René becomes a key performance element.
The basic concept for how René works: each Axis is being driven by the corresponding clock and control voltages, to generate a number from 0 to 3. These numbers together make up the coordinates for the next location that René will go to. If X hits 2 and Y is at 3, then René goes to location 14. The concept is simple, but the results are madly complex, especially when combined with some of the other math that René will do.
René was developed in collaboration with firmware wizard Yerpa58. We spent nearly one full year realizing and growing the original concepts, and over that time we also became good friends. In all, it was wonderful project, and we hope to realize others. Also of great help in developing René were Shawn “Packin' Peanuts!” Cleary, Josh “Woodfinger” Kay, Richard “don't like sequencers” Devine, Aaron “Leadfinger” Abrams, Surachai, James “Data Cadet” Cigler , Tim “Stone‐Finger” Hurley and especially, Kelly Kelbel.
Loading...
+ 8 hidden pages