Future Music

Sugar Bytes say the Nest DIY MIDI sequencer can make music “with a life of its own”

-

Sugar Bytes are making no bones about the fact that Nest, their new ‘DIY sequencer’, is a “challengin­g” beast, but if you can grasp its modular complexiti­es, it could have the potential to help you to make music “with a life of its own”.

Nest is a software environmen­t that can be used to create MIDI, but the fact that there are 20 modules that you can patch together – said to be inspired by “classic integrated circuits and today’s computer features” – means it’s inevitable that things are going to get pretty deep, pretty fast.

You can actually generate up to eight MIDI voices and assign them to four targets. There are internal synths and drums, and you can host up to four VST 2 plugins. Up to 12 scenes can be saved and recalled via MIDI, and you can send to 16 MIDI channels. There’s support for MIDI CCs and automation, and you get five stereo audio outs and a “flexible scale system”.

By patching together the modules, you can create intelligen­t musical contraptio­ns that will spin your music off in different directions. Nest isn’t restricted to software, either – you can use it to drive your hardware.

Nest runs on PC and Mac, standalone and in VST/AU/ AAX formats. It costs 99 euros, and there’s a demo.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia