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Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial
Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial













icedaudio audiofinder tutorial
  1. Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial how to#
  2. Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial install#
  3. Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial mod#

I prefer to set up my own modulation of the position via the mod matrix so I can define a specific region to scan rather than using travel which scans the entire wavetable, but it's all good.ĭon't forget that the wavetable oscillator lets us change how they are traversed via the "stepped" setting, which can have a big impact on the resulting timbre. The order of the waveforms within the wavetables are different between the 1024 and 128 versions.Īgain, to use, unzip and copy them to the sd card (or usb drive with beta) and then on quantum: wavetable>timbre>tools>import from. The reason I've included this is that there are a lot of timbres to explore by importing these at higher period values, eg importing these but setting the period value to 512 will join 4 waveforms into 1 - giving 50 wavefroms in the wavetable, but at a higher frequency with more going in within each timbre. There is also a version with 128 samples per waveform. There is a version with 1024 samples per waveform, which is the nearest higher value to the original 600 samples that the quantum can handle, for the closest fidelity to the originals.

icedaudio audiofinder tutorial

I've randomized the order of the 4000+ mono waveforms and batched them into wavetables of 200 waveforms each (except file 21 which is 158). I've been having a lot of fun using the adventure kid waveforms as wavetables, and figure other quantum owners might enjoy using these too, but without the hassle of making them I've also attached a sample 6 waveform wavetable called akwf1.wav wav>select nameofwavetable.wav>load>select 1024 for period Use finder and drag nameofwavetable.wav to the sd card/usb stick you use in the quantum Sox $(ls *.wav | sort -n) nameofwavetable.wav Open terminal (in applications/utilities) and enter: Make a folder on the desktop (will call it akwf in example) and copy the individual waveform files you want into it and rename them in order eg 001.wav 002.wav etc (for this, I like to use the commercial iced audio audiofinder, with loop on and use the onscreen keyboard to set pitch to audition the waveforms) To make the wavetable from the desired waveforms: Unzip and use finder to copy sox file to /usr/local/bin ( to see this folder, you may need to open finder>Go>Go To Folder - and enter /usr/local/bin

Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial install#

To install sox (used to join the files into a wavetable):

icedaudio audiofinder tutorial

Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial how to#

Here's how to make a custom wavetable from them on a mac ( added: see a couple of posts down to see a cross-platform browser based way of doing this): Following on from before, and building on what Don posted, this is to save people having to reinvent the wheel in using the adventure kid single-cycle waveforms ( ) to make custom wavetables for the quantum (ie for that hydrasynth vibe).Īttached are the 4,358 adventure kid waveforms in one folder, all ready converted to 1024 samples long.















Icedaudio audiofinder tutorial