Prism Sticks: 150 Colourful Noises for Chromaphone
- KVRist
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
Took a lot longer than planned, but it's finished:
Prism Sticks for Chromaphone
150 colourful noises, divided into: Bells & Chimes, Keys, Pads, Percussive Atmospheres, Percussive Hits, Plucks & Strings, Soundscapes & FX, Synthetic, Wind.
Demos, Patch List and Patch Notes all available.
Price is GBP £12.50 (approx. USD $19, EUR €15). Pay by Paypal, emailed to you asap. Enjoy!
Prism Sticks for Chromaphone
150 colourful noises, divided into: Bells & Chimes, Keys, Pads, Percussive Atmospheres, Percussive Hits, Plucks & Strings, Soundscapes & FX, Synthetic, Wind.
Demos, Patch List and Patch Notes all available.
Price is GBP £12.50 (approx. USD $19, EUR €15). Pay by Paypal, emailed to you asap. Enjoy!
Last edited by coincidental on Fri Nov 29, 2013 1:39 am, edited 5 times in total.
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- KVRist
- 152 posts since 31 Aug, 2010 from Cambridge, Mass.
Hi there,
Your demos on Soundcloud sound great, congratulations! I just ordered this and paid with PayPal. Really looking forward to it.
Cheers from Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Ben/Borealis
Your demos on Soundcloud sound great, congratulations! I just ordered this and paid with PayPal. Really looking forward to it.
Cheers from Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Ben/Borealis
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
Thanks for the kind words. They made my day!
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
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- KVRist
- 152 posts since 31 Aug, 2010 from Cambridge, Mass.
I've had this sound bank for a couple of days now and I have to say it is absolutely outstanding. I tend to like sounds that have a distinct character and that lend themselves to more adventurous and unconventional music, I do not like "bread and butter" patches. These sounds appeal to that side of me, but what is especially useful is that they are very playable. They do not take over and tell their own story like some one note patches can. You can play very melodically with them but they have such interesting texture and character that you can also create very unusual soundscapes. Five stars from this user! And they are an absolute bargain at less than $20 USD.
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
Thanks so much for the seal of approval.Borealis wrote:Five stars from this user!
I do aim very much for playability above almost all else - I try bear in mind that these are almost individual instruments, rather than "just patches". In some cases they follow the outline of traditional instruments (Harpsichord, Harp, Kora, Bassoon, Mbira...), in other cases they are new "impossible hybrid" instruments or just interesting and evocative noises. But the aim is always to have something you can get your fingers stuck into and conjure your own performance out of.
I'm sure that as Chromaphone matures there will be updates that permit more per-patch MIDI control, which will expand the expressiveness even further. It's a fascinating instrument!
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
For those who don't frequent the Marketplace, there's a quick sale to celebrate my birthday going on:
Happy Hour patchbank for Lounge Lizard EP-3 (100 patches): £5
Prism Sticks patchbank for Chromaphone (125 patches): £9
It ends today at midnight GMT.
EDIT: Now finished - many thanks to those who bought and for the kind wishes.
Happy Hour patchbank for Lounge Lizard EP-3 (100 patches): £5
Prism Sticks patchbank for Chromaphone (125 patches): £9
It ends today at midnight GMT.
EDIT: Now finished - many thanks to those who bought and for the kind wishes.
Last edited by coincidental on Sun Aug 19, 2012 12:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Sampleconstruct Sampleconstruct https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=191286
- KVRAF
- 16772 posts since 12 Oct, 2008 from Here and there
Congrats on the release coincidental, great to see more sounds coming for this special instrument!
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
Thanks a lot - it's certainly a lot of fun, and I wouldn't rule out doing another patchbank for it before the year's out (particularly if there's an update with more features) - lots of odd and beautiful sounds hidden in tucked-away corners... 
- KVRAF
- 37483 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
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Sampleconstruct Sampleconstruct https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=191286
- KVRAF
- 16772 posts since 12 Oct, 2008 from Here and there
That's an interesting thought, that all the sounds we create already exist and we just have to find those tucked-away corners to harvest them.coincidental wrote:Thanks a lot - it's certainly a lot of fun, and I wouldn't rule out doing another patchbank for it before the year's out (particularly if there's an update with more features) - lots of odd and beautiful sounds hidden in tucked-away corners...
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
Well, particularly with physical modelling, that's often exactly how I think about it.
I imagine all the possible sounds as a vast rubbery plain, with the good/interesting/beautiful/useful sounds (judging this is where taste/experience/influences are important) as deep dips in the plain. You can't see them from a distance, but if you keep your ears open and your antennae twitching (you do have antennae, don't you?) you can feel the slope, the draw, of a nearby dip, and follow it like a marble circling round a funnel. You get the gist I hope - or am I talking nonsense?
Of course, there are also times when you have a more definite aim in mind, and employ the 'standard methods' to make the journey from A to B, but exploring is fun too, and I feel that physical modelling synths like Chromaphone enable this sort of exploration more than some traditional subtractive synths.
I'd be genuinely interested to know what others think, though!
I imagine all the possible sounds as a vast rubbery plain, with the good/interesting/beautiful/useful sounds (judging this is where taste/experience/influences are important) as deep dips in the plain. You can't see them from a distance, but if you keep your ears open and your antennae twitching (you do have antennae, don't you?) you can feel the slope, the draw, of a nearby dip, and follow it like a marble circling round a funnel. You get the gist I hope - or am I talking nonsense?
Of course, there are also times when you have a more definite aim in mind, and employ the 'standard methods' to make the journey from A to B, but exploring is fun too, and I feel that physical modelling synths like Chromaphone enable this sort of exploration more than some traditional subtractive synths.
I'd be genuinely interested to know what others think, though!
And thank you very muchaMUSEd wrote:Happy birthday
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- KVRist
- 152 posts since 31 Aug, 2010 from Cambridge, Mass.
You most definitely are not talking nonsense, that is a fascinating approach to describing what it is that sound designers do. I would only add (and I do not consider myself a sound designer, at least in these circles) that one shouldn't undervalue the unique talent and discernment it takes to harvest the quality of fruit that you and Simon and others have brought to market. (I will stop before I flog the farming metaphor to death.)
- KVRAF
- 37483 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
I've always seen and described my own sound design and composition as a process of exploration in sound space.
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 492 posts since 5 Sep, 2011 from Sussex, UK
Well that's far more succinct!aMUSEd wrote:I've always seen and described my own sound design and composition as a process of exploration in sound space.

