Panoramic Wave Generator Inspired By Early Days Of Sampling

panoramic-wave-generator

Atomic Shadow has announced the Panoramic Wave Generator – a new Kontakt instrument, inspired by the early days of sampling.

Here’s what he has to say about the Panoramic Wave Generator:

I still have an old Akai S-612 and it is one of those things that I never get tired of. You can take a sound and stretch it across the entire keyboard. Depending on your sound it can sound like a howling demon in the low registers or a shrieking bird of prey on the high notes. Of course it has something like 2 seconds of sampling time.

The sounds that come come with the PTG Have no such time limits, They are long, evolving stereo sounds. They are mapped somewhere in the middle range of the keyboard, looped, and then assigned across 5 octaves. Most of the sounds are well over two minutes. They mutate and modulate over time. When they are played in the lower registers it can take quite awhile for it to to play out. One fingered drones anyone?

The sound design made good use of a collection of field recordings that goes back for years. There are machines in action and machines in the their last moments of dying agony. There are many sounds that use the Command Center’s collection of exotic old test gear. Sine and square wave generators, modular filters, ring modulators and a good dose of some top secret gear that cannot be disclosed. Some of the sounds are very playable as pitched instruments while others are far out in soundscape territory. There are sounds that hiss. Sounds that crackle and moan. You can hear the electricity moving around in there.

The user interface is simple though it gives you far more control than my old Akai. There is an LFO section to modulate the sound, tone control, an envelope section and a velocity and balance adjustment on the top row. The lower section is for effects. We start off with a chorus, flanger or phaser. Follow that with a delay with width control and end up with a reverb section with three types of convolution to choose from. There is a great deal that can be done to these very simple controls. Of course my suggestion is to run this machine through other machines in your own collection, or abuse it with your favorite plug.

Here’s an audio preview of the Panoramic Tone Generator:

The Panoramic Tone Generator will be available very soon. Pricing and availability are to come. See the Atomic Shadow site for details.

12 thoughts on “Panoramic Wave Generator Inspired By Early Days Of Sampling

  1. I hope to get an audio demo done soon and posted on the page linked above.

    I am planning to use a download service that takes credit cards, not PayPal. Will anyone have a major problem with that?

    1. Since you posted this here on Synthtopia, where I happened to read it, it would not cause a problem for me.

      But normally, being re-directed to a third-party payment processor immediately kills the purchase for me. I suggest you do some state tracking on your website and watch for sales that were submitted up to that point, but never completed, and see if that figure is worth not using Paypal.

      1. edit, if it would let me: I meant being re-directed to a NON-PAYPAL third-party processor sketches me out. While I’m not a huge fan of some of their business practices, I’ve made my peace with using them. I just never leave more than $300 in the account in case they suddenly decide I’m a terrorist or something…

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