Future Music

Module roundup: Instruo Harmonàig and Saich

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Although these two modules are completely standalone I’ll review them as a matched pair, seeing as they work so well together and I’m pretty sure that the Saich was designed to complement the Harmonàig. To top that off, they look great next to each other in a rack, with the added benefit of short cables needed for what could well be a near permanent connection.

I’ll kick things off with a look at the Harmonàig, an 18hp module which has rapidly become a community favourite for quantising. With the new gold on black Instruo livery it certainly looks the part. There’s a heft to Instruo gear that inspires confidence in build quality without making you worry about dragging your rig to gigs.

The Harmonàig can take an input voltage from pretty much any source (I prefer sample and hold, sequencer outputs or even simple LFOs) which it then processes to provide an output voltage which, when plugged into the volt per octave of a sound source means you have controlled pitch. So far so normal. What the Harmonàig does is a bit special…

It's not quite polyphonic in the traditiona­l sense but the Harmonàig does mean you can now play chords, assuming you have voices to spare. You can route your root, 3rd,5th and 7th to individual voices. Or, if you want to play modular power chords, just the root and 5th, or any other combinatio­n of notes.

The slider up top allows for global transposit­ion, as well as help with other functions. There are various modes and button combos to dig into extra functional­ity but there’s not space to cover all those here.

What makes the Harmonàig special is how it becomes a truly musical tool, even for users with little (or no) theory knowledge. There are two controls to the left that let you dial in the chord voicings and inversions. You don’t need to know what this means to get great results from them. On top of that they both take CV so you can modulate them for added musical complexity, spacing out your virtual fingers on the virtual keyboard (that's what the voicing section does). The big knob to the right is where you further define the feel or mood, so give it a twist or add CV to spice up your chords.

I’ll move on to the Saich in a minute but have a quick think about what the Harmonàig does for a second. It provides a polyphonic output which is very well suited to creating chord progressio­ns, with voice complexity.

It does this by splitting the output across four channels, each with a physical output, so what you can also do is drive four totally different sound sources with it. You could easily set a different voice for the bass and send the others elsewhere (or all to separate), meaning you can set up complement­ary voices for each note (assuming you tune each voice properly – the Harmonàig has a handy tool for that too).

Get saiched up

So on to the Saich, a four-voice VCO made as the dream partner to the Harmonàig, although it can obviously be paired up with other modules. This is another tool that has some hidden functional­ity, but for now I’ll just cover the top level stuff. The triangle cores all have their own volts per octave input and detune knobs, with global pitch having a coarse and fine-tuning control.

The cores have CV controllab­le PWM for adding a little movement to your voices, as well as there being a sub out, so you can really get things thick and creamy. On top of this, there’s an FM input, with both CV and knob control, which can be set to linear or exponentia­l.

These cores sound great, with a lot of versatilit­y in sound shaping. As a four-voice VCO in its own right, Saich is a winner…

Where these two really shine is together. They make a great pairing, with many features and options I don’t have space to cover. Rest assured, the Harmonàig and Saich play well on their own but as musical siblings they shine. Never has it been truer that the sum of the parts are greater than the whole.

Whether you have musical chops or you live in the land of bleeps and bloops you won’t go wrong with these two. Rob Redman instruomod­ular.com

INSTRUO HARMONÀIG

VERDICT 9.0

INSTRUO SAICH

VERDICT 8.0

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