eric coleridge wrote:Doesn't anyone else have any good Sample and Hold applictions???
Anyone?
i always feel like i can never have enough sample and hold circuits. anyway, since you asked, i mentioned in an earlier thread how useful having two cp251s is. i can't remember if i wrote about exactly what i do with them.
one thing i like to do is to patch the smooth out of each to an attenuator and then to the lfo in of the other. then then the voltages coming out of the two stepped outs follow eachother in an interesting way. if you patch each smooth out to the multiple before the attenuator, you can direct these elsewhere as well. you'll get interesting results patching one of the smoothed outs to the vca, and the stepped out from the other cp251 to vco pitch, and either the other stepped or the other smoothed to filter.
you can also get interesting patterns patching the triangle lfo out of one cp251 to the s/h in of the other, and then by varying the speed of the lfo you're sampling you'll get a lot of interesting sequencer-like patterns. i think this may be described in the cp251 manual, but i'm not sure. i kind of prefer this to having a sequencer because it forces me to discover interesting patterns by "tuning in" to them as opposed to inventing a pattern and explicitly instructing the sequencer to reproduce it again and again.
another thing to try if you have a modular with several oscillators is to sample the pulse waveform of three or four mixed together. (don't sync them). this will give you some interesting melodic sequences with 6 - 8 distinct voltages. of course you'll need at least one more oscillator to hear what you're sampling. vary the sampling rate or the oscillator pitch ever so gradually and the tune changes. if you don't have as many oscillators, you can always tape record your oscillators mixed together, then feed the playback into the s/h in and use the s/h out to control the pitch of the same oscillators. for a variation on this, when you're taping the oscillators, plug a very slow sample/hold out to the cv in of one or more of them. when you're sampling the taped voltages later you'll get a change in the melody every time their pitch changed.
the possibilities are endless and what you can do is far greater than than the sum of sample and hold circuits you have available. you can probably approximate all the above effects with midi, but there's no substitute for what you discover by accident listening sample/hold patterns in real time.