Computer Music

Step by step

2. DAW-driven sample manipulati­on using VCV Rack’s VST Bridge

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1 For this tutorial, we’re going to need to connect VCV Rack with our DAW. For MIDI sync, we’ll need to set something up. We’re on a Mac, so we can go into Audio MIDI Setup, choose MIDI Setup, open the IAC Driver and check Device Is Online. Windows users will use something like the free LoopBe1: bit.ly/Loop_Be1

2 Now, let’s open our DAW – in this case, Ableton Live. We’ll go the Live menu and open Preference­s. There, we’ll click the Link MIDI tab. Near the bottom, we see options for connecting both our MIDI Tracks and Sync to the various available MIDI devices – including the IAC Driver we’ve just enabled. We’ll make sure both IAC Driver Input and Output are On.

3 We’ll drag a drum loop clip onto an audio track in Live, then drag the VCV Bridge VST plugin into the same track – this renders the track output silent. Next, we’ll fire up the standalone VCV Rack app and start with a new, clean rack, into which we’ll instantiat­e MIDI and Audio modules. In the MIDI module, we select IAC Driver Bus 1 as the Core MIDI Device.

4 In the Audio module, we’ll select Bridge as our Audio driver and choose Port 1 as our audio device. This is VCV Bridge’s default port. Now to our patch. Let’s grab a Campione live sampler module from Sonus Modular. We’ll use it to sample the drum loop loaded into Live. We’ll temporaril­y connect our Audio modules Output 2 to its own Input 2.

5 If Live is playing, we’ll now hear our drum loop playing through VCV Rack. Let’s patch our Audio module’s Output 1 to Campione’s In jack. This will allow us to sample the beat. We do this by clicking Campione’s Record button to activate recording, and again to deactivate it. We’ll try to time our button toggling so we catch a perfect loop.

6 We can now remove the Audio module’s patch cables. We’ll call up fresh VCF and VCA modules. We’ll patch Campione’s Out to the VCF’s In, and the VCF’s LPF to the VCA’s top In. The VCA’s top Out will go to the Audio module’s Inputs 1 and 2. Let’s add a SEQ-3 module. We’ll patch our MIDI module’s CLK 1 jack to the sequencer’s Ext Clk input.

7 The sequencer will now get its tempo from Live. We’ll patch the MIDI-1’s Strt to SEQ-3’s Reset. We’ll connect the sequencer’s first Gate Out jack to Campione’s Play jack and toggle the OneShot and Loop switches. We can now hear the filtered sample playing on every second pass of the sequencer. Let’s boost the VCF Freq and VCA Level knobs.

8 Crank Campione’s Speed knob down, and run a cable from SEQ-3’s Row 1 jack to Campione’s Speed jack. Tweaking the knobs in the sequencer’s top row causes the sample to play at different speeds for each step. Similarly, patch Row 2 to the VCF’s Freq input and use it to control the filter cutoff per step. Don’t forget VCF’s Freq and Freq CV knobs!

9 Finally, call up Arable Instrument­s’ Joni module and route it between VCA and Audio modules. Granular processors like this chop the sound into tiny grains that can be manipulate­d on a microscopi­c level. Use a second synchronis­ed sequencer to modulate parameters for a nightmaris­h granular ambience. Weird and wonderful!

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