I’m not a huge fan of the kind of surgical precision of the Sub’s sound, but some of those features seem great. And what really makes me envious is its paraphony.
Sooo, my immediate thought was - could the analogue hardware and the micro controller of the Voyager handle paraphony, with a new OS? Or are there any limitations that makes that impossible? That would be just soooo awesome…!
Since Voyager stores the frequency offset of OSC2 and OSC3 with the patch, can’t it dynamically change this voltage provided that the interval is not beyond the frequency reach in either direction? And since the keyboard scanning for poly already takes place (in use case of using it for Midi controller), what else is needed?
Obviously, this would only serve for one handed chords, not for a situation where you might drone a bass note and play a 2nd or two additional notes further up the keyboard… so 7 steps or limited to a major triad range. Not ideal but would be an interesting experiment at least for demo purposes.
If you really wanted to put on your mad scientist cap, you could tweak some internal tuning for bigger range, I would think! But who would relish an added mode where you could play limited two note para or major, minor, diminished triads. (no augmented triads allowed : )
Could be a CPU/horsepower issue and latency but considering the speed at which you can scroll through patches and have the sound (and differing intervals not to mention 20 other settings loaded and applied) replace the current patch, it would seem worth a try?
I don’t think this is possible that easy.
But you may try tuning the oscillators #2 and #3 on the fly via MIDI CC to get three voice paraphonic results.
Or just use some other keyboard and pass it through the Voyagers audio in an trigger the Voyager via the MIDI output of this polyphonic synth. This will give you a paraphonic keyboard with a Moog filter.
But I prefer poly synth. Maybe this is why there were not paraphonic synth available in the last 30 years. This is just some hype that started a few months ago when Waldorf showed their Pulse2 with its paraphonic modes.
Don’t get me wrong, the Sub37 and the Pulse2 are fine synths, but I just don’t care about paraphonic modes.
It would absolutely be possible, I think. There’s an iPad app called patch morphed that can make your voyager para. I don’t get home to my voyager for five more months to test it, but there’s a YouTube video of it working. Not sure how smooth it is. Anxious to try it.
As to the surgical precision, the very next Sub 37 OS will have a VARIANCE parameter that allows you to introduce varying degrees of pitch imprecision. I’ve been beta testing it and I really like it.
(I’m just trying to tempt you even more to add a Sub 37 to your arsenal;-)
The OS is due very soon and will please a great many Sub 37 owners in lots of different ways.
I’m not in the loop about the editor so, no idea.
My question is:
"Why wait for either? The Sub 37 is a complete joy to own right now, and will get even better over time.
The forthcoming Sub 37 Updater app makes updating a no-brainer, so there’s nothing to be gained by waiting for a Sub 37 with the new OS already installed.
I’m actually not in sales at all and make no commissions whatsoever on sales.
I try to be very careful to say “Just get it”, as opposed to “Just get it at Sweetwater.”
Those who read a lot of my posts know that I am not afraid to say what I do or don’t like about something. And I certainly will not hold back my praise for something just because we don’t carry it (rhymes with Try Mon, sigh…)
I’m on the Moog Forum simply because of my love for their gear and respect for the diverse forum members. I’ve been playing with Moogs since 1977, and have met with Dr. Moog twice, and it’s a source of pride that, all these decades later, I’m actually able to help and participate with the process.
Back to topic, I have been able to do some nice duophonies with most Moogs by setting their key priority to Low Note, and feeding another synth through the audio input…