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Prototype rig for new module

Today I mocked up a rig for a rhythm module I’ve been dreaming up for ages called ‘Chains’. The three vertical bars are SoftPot linear touch-sensitive potentiometers and the screen will give visual feedback on what’s going on internally.

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The five inputs on the left will handle clock, reset and two individual analogue inputs which can be recorded to each chain – I’ll need some kind of toggle switch here to select.  The fifth input is an idea I’m keen to play around with: quantisation and anti-quantisation. The idea is 0V will leave a recording as-is, +5v will pull an event to the nearest 16th or 32th note, but -5v will push it away by the same amount. I have no idea if this will work but it’s there to try as the whole idea is ways of making rhythm more organic.

There are space for a few more inputs as needed but I’m going to start simple. Most of the interaction is done through the buttons under the screen. I’m using big, clear buttons for actions rather than fiddling around with a rotary encoder as this needs to be fast and intuitive for live interaction. The buttons will handle things like record, clear, motif load/save. I also need something for motif length adjustment – maybe individual tempo too – and I’m sure there will be more idea so the sixth button is for experimentation or may end up being a dreaded ‘shift’ button so I can double up operations on the five other buttons.

Finally the outputs on the right simply dump out whatever is on a particular chain at that point in time, be it CV or gate info. I’m glad I built this on cardboard because it gave me a better sense of positioning the controls away from the pots, it’s fun developing UX physically (well, it’s not really UX if you’re a purist, but it’s a step up for me dreaming things up and expecting them to work first time!).

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From the back the board is a scramble. I’m using the bigger Arduino as a mock up purely because I don’t know how many inputs or outputs I’ll need for now, it’s overkill. The final version I’d like to bake into an AVR but I’m thinking that being able to upload firmware will be a massive boon for rapid development if I ever made this thing commercially.

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