(hide navigation)
  • Swedish content
Fund my projects
Patreon
Steady
Don't miss
Page thumbnail
Chopin vs. the Flappy-Bird Volume Control
Forum
Register
Log in
Latest comments
Syndication
RSS feed
Feedback
Video clips

Padme

Padme is an Amiga-based lo-fi pad synth instrument based on intervals of Shepard tones.

Posted Friday 28-Jun-2024 07:41

Discuss this page

Disclaimer: I am not responsible for what people (other than myself) write in the forums. Please report any abuse, such as insults, slander, spam and illegal material, and I will take appropriate actions. Don't feed the trolls.

Jag tar inget ansvar för det som skrivs i forumet, förutom mina egna inlägg. Vänligen rapportera alla inlägg som bryter mot reglerna, så ska jag se vad jag kan göra. Som regelbrott räknas till exempel förolämpningar, förtal, spam och olagligt material. Mata inte trålarna.

Anonymous
Sat 29-Jun-2024 08:34
Is the Amiga binary available for download?
Anonymous
Mon 15-Jul-2024 20:00
Is the Amiga binary available for download?
+1 I'd love to add this to my studio :)
lft
Linus Åkesson
Tue 16-Jul-2024 20:27
Is the Amiga binary available for download?

Not at the moment, but perhaps in the future. I'd like to use it for some of my own projects first though.
Anonymous
Thu 25-Jul-2024 20:25
+1 for DL
atsampson
Adam Sampson
Fri 26-Jul-2024 02:52
That's a neat design! I wonder whether anybody's tried the same as a left-hand layout for accordion? There are certainly accordions that use fifths and thirds, but I don't know of any that combine both.

The Shepard-tone technique is used in some Hammond organs, where it's called "harmonic foldback" - the electromechanical tone generator doesn't have enough outputs to provide all 9 harmonics for the whole keyboard, so some harmonics have to wrap around with attenuation. If you pull out just the top four drawbars on a B3/C3, then the top octave works like your layout here - any inversion of a chord within that octave sounds the same, and you can play endlessly ascending/descending sequences.