PureData: Purity and zen
Posted: Sun Mar 09, 2025 11:11 am
So there is this program...
idk how anybody else feels but PureData has been laughing me in my face since i was 13, I swear it and I want it to stop. I need to prove myself to PureData that I'm not stupid, all ambition no skill.
It all started with Meshuggah, kinda, we'll get there. Fredrik, their guitarist, had something called the 33. What the 33 was was a breath controller stuck to a joystick so that you could not just control the volume of your guitar by blowing into a tube, you could also control a filter by moving your head around. The first 33 was analog (cool! juicy! we love analog filters!) but why I am complaining on the internet is the last version, which was unanalog, a MIDI implementation. The effects unit to accompany this controller was a pretty advanced modular synth emulator made by Nord. The Nord Modular is awesome, even today, but I have never acquired one. there is however a demo version that is still available to get, keyword: demo version. The demo version is this incredible fun to play with and has taught me tons about synthesis and signal processing, it also has restrictions that make you really remember that it is a demo version. Limited MIDI-abilty and [f]no processing of external audio[/f] being notable restrictions.
So there is this modular environment that I am very comfortable with and I am pretty knowledgible in how it works that I in practice cannot use because I have no way to conveniently interface it with any other instrument or software. Thank god there is an open source, well supported programming language that uses modular blocks that is widely supported and just blows that windows 98 ass Reactor wannabe out of the water, right? Yeah, right!
I just can't, I mean I can but that just makes it worse. It is testing me. I have university lessons in Pd but I still havent gotten my lazy ass past making a simple ring modulator. I have spent way too many hours looking at and skipping tutorials that takes way too long explaining the basics of synths that I already know only to have missed the basic stuff I need to make the cool things I want to. Like if i want to make a crude glitch effect I know exactly how to use multiplexing to skip though delay lines in Nord Modular but I haven't got the finesse to learn enough PureData to do it.
Yeah I probably am way dumber than I think and just need to work in Pd to get things done but I have way to many things I wanna do at the same time. I have gone through so many stupid loops to not have to use PureData and that is just counting the things I could have used google to download somebody elses program.
Is this just the DSP gods telling me I am too dumb to move past offset -> muff -> twin reverb????
Whatever, complaining just makes me more stupider...
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_JXgpiV4sU[/youtube]
idk how anybody else feels but PureData has been laughing me in my face since i was 13, I swear it and I want it to stop. I need to prove myself to PureData that I'm not stupid, all ambition no skill.
It all started with Meshuggah, kinda, we'll get there. Fredrik, their guitarist, had something called the 33. What the 33 was was a breath controller stuck to a joystick so that you could not just control the volume of your guitar by blowing into a tube, you could also control a filter by moving your head around. The first 33 was analog (cool! juicy! we love analog filters!) but why I am complaining on the internet is the last version, which was unanalog, a MIDI implementation. The effects unit to accompany this controller was a pretty advanced modular synth emulator made by Nord. The Nord Modular is awesome, even today, but I have never acquired one. there is however a demo version that is still available to get, keyword: demo version. The demo version is this incredible fun to play with and has taught me tons about synthesis and signal processing, it also has restrictions that make you really remember that it is a demo version. Limited MIDI-abilty and [f]no processing of external audio[/f] being notable restrictions.
So there is this modular environment that I am very comfortable with and I am pretty knowledgible in how it works that I in practice cannot use because I have no way to conveniently interface it with any other instrument or software. Thank god there is an open source, well supported programming language that uses modular blocks that is widely supported and just blows that windows 98 ass Reactor wannabe out of the water, right? Yeah, right!
I just can't, I mean I can but that just makes it worse. It is testing me. I have university lessons in Pd but I still havent gotten my lazy ass past making a simple ring modulator. I have spent way too many hours looking at and skipping tutorials that takes way too long explaining the basics of synths that I already know only to have missed the basic stuff I need to make the cool things I want to. Like if i want to make a crude glitch effect I know exactly how to use multiplexing to skip though delay lines in Nord Modular but I haven't got the finesse to learn enough PureData to do it.
Yeah I probably am way dumber than I think and just need to work in Pd to get things done but I have way to many things I wanna do at the same time. I have gone through so many stupid loops to not have to use PureData and that is just counting the things I could have used google to download somebody elses program.
Is this just the DSP gods telling me I am too dumb to move past offset -> muff -> twin reverb????
Whatever, complaining just makes me more stupider...
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_JXgpiV4sU[/youtube]