![]() If individual modules ever get MIDI in I think my head would explode. Every module in sunvox can send MIDI out so you can have Numerology trigger one instance of sunvox and use numerology to route the MIDI and proccess it to other sunvoxs! It's ridiculous stupid cool. It gets interesting when you have Numerology trigger a multi-synth that's triggering multiple multi-synths.īut to take it even further, a trick I discovered is that you can duplicate the sunvox app and run multiple copies at a time and give them different MIDI ins. It triggers multiple modules and you can transpose the pitch or add randomization. The multi-synth module is shaping up to be my favorite. CMD +i interpolates the data so it's not as mundane a task as I thought it would be. I use a single track pattern to make automation. I had an awesome setup going on and I thought Numerology was recording, but the audio files were empty.Īutomating the parameters actually turned out to be great! You do have to look at the manual, but it didn't take long to understand. It works, but I find audio routing gets sorta complicated. Then in numerology you have to change the audio in to soundflower. You can get around this using audiohijack by setting up a session that hijacks sunvox in AH, muting it and inserting an auxiliary device output effect that's part of AH. Unfortunately, sunvox doesn't have an audio out option at the moment, on OS X at least. ![]() If anyone uses it I'd love to hear about it! Or if you need some help getting it working, I'll do my best! There are some videos on youtube of some algorithmic sequencing(video below) that are interesting, but Numerology does things of this nature so well and easily it hasn't been a priority for me to learn how to do. It also has MIDI out, but I haven't experimented with that much yet either. As a tracker it uses non-standard pattern based commands for automation and I haven't tried to see if I can control these with Numerology or MIDI in general yet. ![]() You can setup concurrent patterns which makes it easier for me to use than other trackers that mostly follow the one pattern at a time model. I'm not a huge fan of trackers, but as far as they go it's pretty good. You could record the MIDI into a pattern in sunvox and export the audio, but what I like to do most of the time is use the program AudioHijack (the demo is perfectly usable for this purpose with a 10 minute limit, but it's worth buying) to quickly record it and drag the audio file into a sampler or drum module in Numerology(love this feature!). Unfortunately, at the moment it has no audio out setting. I'm really impressed with the ethereal and deceptively simple, yet unusual sounds it makes. Just wanted to share the cool program sunvox because the developer recently added MIDI in. ![]()
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