3 arpeggiated lines in iris2 demo / live. 3/4 melody, 7/4 bass and pad, 2/4 rhythm. sequenced in audacity coz i didnt know if live 8 could do multiple time signatures. goes slightly out of phase towards the end.
sliding pitch shift of 1 semitone. mastered in audition

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OK- so I re-recorded my piece today, exporting it as a midi file, slowing it down to 42 bpm (I finished reading Mostly Harmless this morning) and recording it a few times with my synths (D-05, JP8080, BS2, Streichfett, Nord Piano) and varied settings on my effects pedals and EQ etc.

Quite happy with it.

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https://soundcloud.com/ohm-research/sine12-disquiet-0327

A sine wave sequenced with variable voltages and clocked simultaneously in 3/4, 2/4, and 7/4 by a .com Gate Math.

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I started this track with an acoustic guitar melody in 3/4. It sounded very different in the beginning. :smiley:
The guitar track ended up in the ER-301, played slowly enough that the time signature (RIP challenge) and instrument doesn’t really matter anymore. As well as the slo-mo guitar, here are a couple percussion loops, one a mindless 2/4 click, and the other a 7/4 pattern of clicks and blips. I also ended up putting a simple kick and snare pattern that I think is in 7/4…

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This was a fun one! After making something really boring in Ableton I decided it would be more fun to try and do this live with hardware.

I sequenced this using a beatstep pro - the voices are a rings, an erebus, and a dixie2 - I mostly focused on setting up the different time signatures rather than creating any interested sounds. I hope to return to this idea and develop if further.

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Usual suspects for me:
Bass by my Ambika playing in 3/4 time
Rhodes in 7/4 plinking away
A modular synth sounding like a guitar in 2/2
Guitar sounding like a pad playing once every 4 bars.

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Can the BSP do that? I knew it could play different lengths, but I didn’t know if could play alternate signatures - can it do that?

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You can set a last step for each track - So I made a sequence of 28 steps length and then tried to phrase it like 7/8 time.

edit - It’s possible that I don’t actually understand time signatures.

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0327 Disquiet Junto
7/4 + 3/4 + 2/4 = 4/4
The concept was to create a recording using three different time signatures at the same time.
1. Track one is a Yamaha RY-30 drum machine playing in 2/4
2. Track two is a bass vsti playing in ¾
3. Track three is a modular synth vsti playing in 7/4
4. The time signature for the whole piece is at 7/4 which was set in Reaper at a tempo of 115 bpm

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Hey all,

Morbus Sumus(disquiet0327)
And it had so much promise…
This week started out with a nice polyrhythm on a acoustic kit in Patterning and when looking for melodies to match, it took a turn for the worse. The three time signatures sounded quite nice together, but any attempts at a melodic accompaniment eluded me. I turned the acoustic kit turned to noise and began working on a random evolving patch in Ripplemaker. Then both were loaded into AUM mixer where volumes and tempo were adjusted live while recording. The randomness of Ripplemaker was vexing, so four recordings were made. While one was close, the buildup still wasn’t right. Then, while looking to cut and layer in Cubasis, the sound came. Having two recordings that were slightly off gave a nice conflicting pattern at the start, but then all the elements merge to a cacophonous and fitting end. The patterns have a small bit of factory verb and Ripplemaker is running an instance of Eos in AUM. Automated panning for both channels resolves into the center, adding to the noise as each individually panned instrument begins to appear. The phasing effect is a happy byproduct of channel cancelation…I think? Knowing 3:27 was overkill given the material, a dyslexic 2:37 was maintained during the live recording, so maybe half credit?
The mood is both frantic exasperation and kamikaze spin cycle :-/
Can’t spell or remember gear

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Funky spacey recognizable

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I’m temporarily obsessed with the free plug-in Plogue Alter/Ego and I wanted to see if I could make it sing in Esperanto. The lyrics for the vocal parts were taken from Proverbaro Esperanta, the collection of proverbs compiled by L. L. Zamenhof, the creator of Esperanto.

7/4 time – Stereo Left – “Alia tempo, aliaj moroj.”
3/4 time – Stereo Center – “Estis la tempo, ni ne komprenis - pasis la tempo, la saĝ’ al ni venis.”
2/4 time – Stereo Right – “Tempo flatas, tempo batas.”

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this is mine… I think I might have used a short sample of @ioflow piano from one of the lines remix projects…hope this is ok.

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long time listener, first time contributor.

a) 2/4 - electronics
b) 7/4 - live drums
c) 3/4 - piano improvisation

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Signed up to the disquiet junto mailing list a while ago and am glad I finally got around to doing one!

Begins with rythmic elements in 2/4 which build and change but carry through the whole song (made on Elektron Machinedrum). The bassline comes in next in 3/4 and plods along for most of the song filtering up and down (made on microKORG). Finally everyones favorite time signature 7/4 comes to the party a little later with a wondering melody (made on a Waldorf Blofeld).

I started by thinking a lot… too much even, about how these time signatures might work together to create phrases. 3 and 2 gives phrases at 6, 3 and 7 at 21, 2 and 7 at 14 and finally the whole thing should wrap around at 42. When I finally got some time on the weekend to start working I found none of this very helpful and just went about creating a 7 beat phrase that I liked. Then played around looking for a good voice for it. Next I made a simple harmonious bassline in 3 and finally added some rythm with the 2.

Recorded in one take, sequenced with an Elektron Octatrack and mixed on a Yamaha analog mixing console.

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As several others have observed, 42 is the answer to life, the universe, everything, and this Junto assignment. So I put on my two Zaphod Beeblebrox thinking caps and approached this piece as a mathematical problem. A piece composed in 3/4, 2/4 and 7/4 will converge every 42 beats: 14 measures of 3/4, 21 measures of 2/4, and 6 measures of 7/4.

More math: I decided to use three chords during each 42 beat phrase, and make the chords change on measure boundaries even though the measures don’t line up. The 7/4 line plays each chord for 2 measures. The 2/4 line plays each chord for 7 measures The 3/4 line plays 5 measures of the first chord, 4 of the second, and 5 of the third. Careful selection of the individual notes around the chord changes allowed this to work without dissonance.

Created in Live with Ableton instruments. Playing each time signature are: cello on 3/4, bass on 2/4, and guitar, violin and flute on 7/4. Live handled the multiple simultaneous time signatures pretty well.

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Much struggling with Reaper. I love Reaper, but have never tried to do anything in multiple time signatures (let alone anything other than 4/4 or 12/8). Wish I would have just done something that took advantage of the premise rather than fought it the whole way through, but there you have it :slight_smile:

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Let me know if your track doesn’t show up in the playlist. The SoundCloud interface has been a bit jittery lately, and sometimes it doesn’t take. The play list is here:

http://soundcloud.com/disquiet/sets/disquiet-junto-project-0327

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Now the noise gets some creepy crawlies :wink:


All moving parts shot on location with a Samsung Galaxy S4 and exported to LumaFusion on iOS for manipulation.

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Well I wasn’t able to pull this together into a finished thing but, and probably because, I spent all the time jamming around and learning how the ratios can work together. I had a go at running a stream though for a couple of friends which in highly skippable form is here:

Drums are in 7/4, there is an STO bassline at 2/4 with a pair of Mangroves which a root-noted by the 2/4 STO with a 3/4 sequence of their own running on top

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