From sean whalen Sent Wed, Sep 8th 1999, 04:33
from my understanding a ring modulator takes the sum and difference of the frequencies to create a crystalline effect, and that's definitely not what this is, unless there are other ways to use ring modulation that im not aware of. -sean ----- Original Message ----- From: Matthew Allen <xxxxxxx@xxxx.xxx> To: 'sean whalen' <xxxxxxx@xxxxxxx.xxx>; idmlist <xxx@xxxxxxxxx.xxx> Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 1999 9:05 PM Subject: (idm) RE: (dim) transform multiply > >From your description this is basically what a ring modulator does. Very > common piece of analog gear. > > m. > > -----Original Message----- > From: sean whalen [mailto:xxxxxxx@xxxxxxx.xxx] > Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 1999 5:31 PM > To: idmlist > Subject: (idm) transform multiply > > > this is somewhat off-topic, depending on the context, but... i just got an > esi4000 sampler and it has a great effect called 'transform multiply' which > takes two samples, combines their like frequencies and discards the rest. > the result is great for coming up with new, creepy sounds from two ordinary > samples. >