24 Jan 2016
I should elaborate on what this device does.
The easiest way to think of it is 3 separate devices that share a rack.
The first device, PLS, 16 pulse/trigger/gate generators. Each of the 16 generators has 4 sources of pulses: a clock divider, a euclidian pulse source, a morphable/fadable X/Y percussion pattern source, and an external CV input. All 4 sources can run at the same time. Each generator is assigned a spot on a 4x4 grid. The pattern parameter allows a generator to fire its neighbors along with itself.
All these overlapping pulse sources combined can create some really interesting and unique rhythmic patterns, especially when running at different speeds and clock divisions.
The last device, QTZ, is 4 CV quantizers that take a CV signal and snaps it to note values you select. The range and offset can be used to modify any signal into the note ranges you want. The result quantized note stream can then be transposed by semitones. Running modulation into the range and offset can create some amazing melodies.
The middle device, SEQ, is 8 analog style sequencers. The playhead runs form the start position to the end position via the rows (w1,w2,w3...w8,x1,x2....) or columns (w1,x1,y1,z1,w2,x2....). The playhead moves according to the movement parameter (forward,backward,pendulum,random walk) each time the source generator changes. When the sequencers playhead is over a knob, that knobs CV value is output. The output can optionally be run though QTZ. There are also inputs on the back for each sequencer to override the knob value, which causes the sequencer to act as a sample and hold for any CV source.
Will have some videos up soon.