But nothing like a timeline in the sense I think you mean. And they can be used as templates to make a different "song". Somehow several Audulus Aces have built things that play a "song" (quotes cause they're not conventional songs in certain ways).incredible patching and module masterpieces. And Svens zMors modular, and Analogkit.ĭoes it have anything similar to the timeline? Or would you drive it from another app?ĪnalogKit was OK for making free running noise generators or very short sequences but I want to make songs, things that have discernible verses, choruses, said: no timeline. Lots of money, all in (for iOS), no regrets, glad to help finance Taylor's R&D, but for making music I'm using Sunvox, and I'd say I'm learning Audulus. I bought Audulus, including the extra $45 on IAP, (I might've skipped one of these IAP, so $38) then the new one went live and I bought that too, in which all IAPs, and more, were rolled into the $30. The new Audulus loads with tons of prebuilt modules and I'm going to learn how to use them, but that's a seperate/additional activity, adjunct to making music. I'm an old dude in many ways, which here means I don't want to have to build everything. I have both.I dip my toes into Audulus snd try stuff, since 2, amazing powers, beautiful gui! You can build almost anything in it, probably timeline included.Īnd I use Sunvox almost every day. I tried AnalogKit but the lack of a timeline (A SunVox thing similar to a song sequencer) became a hindrance. Is there anything in Audulus that would tempt me to devote some time to it instead? I mean, your time must be worth something to you, right? How many hours do you use Audulus a week? If it's more than 4 hours over the next year, and you consider your time is worth at least minimum wage, it would pay for itself by turning the 4 hours you spent designing something into a few minutes.Ĭheck out this speed patching video - I did this in about 30 minutes. If you like 2 enough to keep using it, why not "pay yourself" considering all the time you'll save when you're designing with modules instead of nodes. I dunno, it's so mindbogglingly cheap for what you get, I really don't see any reason to stick with 2. If you get 3, you can then get by without getting 4, and people will still, for the indeterminate future, be uploading SOME patches you can use, as long as they don't have new nodes in 4 that 3 doesn't have. I'm not going to put 2 back on my computer.īackwards compatibility will be easier from Audulus 3-4. You'll kinda be left alone - if you have 3, I can help you fix problems directly on my computer. The oscillator and envelope have been totally recoded, patches load faster.anyway, as a 2 user, you pretty much won't be able to use any patch that gets posted to the forum. 3 is completely rewritten from the ground up and sounds better all around. Select a node to highlight its connections.I'll have to ask Taylor about that - I really suggest buying 3 though, you're going to be left in the dust by other designers.Updated module library: hundreds of new and improved modules, including analog modeling VCFs and VCAs, new effects like the Icebox Audio Freezer, and many new useful module building utilities.Poly pack - Stereo and Quadraphonic processing!.Switch pack - two nodes for signal routing, more to come!.Timing mode - figure out which nodes are using the most CPU!.Math expression module -34 Math nodes in one!.iCloud support - effortlessly sync patches between Mac and iPad.audio unit version - run Audulus as an Audio Unit inside other apps (free download).encapsulation - group nodes into sub-patches.unlimited history - everything you do is stored.presets - quickly change between settings.MIDI control - use your control surface or MIDI keyboard.fluid interface - smooth animated interaction. Audulus's user interface is clean, simple, and easy to learn, allowing you to focus on sound. All with low latency real-time processing suitable for live performance. With Audulus, you can build synthesizers, design new sounds, or process audio. Audulus is a minimalist modular audio-processing application.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |