Revolution MP3 Audio Demos
Audio 001:Revolution 1
- This demo uses the Revolution for all bass, synth, bleeps, and squeaks, and a TR-909 for the drums. Notice the variations for each synth part were created using the Remix feature, and all effects processing was from the Revolution as well.
Audio 002:The Chase
- This demo was inspired by Giorgio Moroder's classic. The Revolution was used to create the bass, lead, electro-growls, and filter screams. The internal effects were used to process the sounds of the Revolution. And notice all the variations were created using the Remix feature. A Korg ES1 was used for the drums and white-noise swoosh.
Audio 003:Basslines & Leads
- Various bass and lead lines with delay
Audio 004:Rubber
- More basslines... some using the CV mod amount to animate the filter cutoff giving a more elastic sound.
Audio 005:Classic Overdrive
- Here we have some basslines using the built in overdrive and effects. Hmmm, that one sounds kind of familiar.
Audio 006:Sawtooth Overdrive
- Here we show what the sawtooth waveform sounds like overdriven and dry.
Audio 007:Squarewave Overdrive
- Here we show what the square waveform sounds like overdriven, with just a touch of internal reverb.
Audio 008:Ascention
- Here we show a pattern being played forward and backwards as well as remixed, with internal delay, and swing.
Audio 009:Other Sounds
- Here we show what the Revolution can do when the headphone output is plugged back into the filter input. The feedback loop includes the internal effects and overdrive within the chain for further processing of the sounds. This technique can produce some truely bizarre results.
Audio 010:Filtering External Sounds
- Here we are running a high hat pattern from the TR909 into the Revolution's filter input.
Audio 011:External Filter Modulation
- Here we have taken the headphone output and plugged it back into the filter input, causing the filter to self oscillate. We then take the kick drum output of the TR909 and plug it into the Revolution's CV input to modulate the filter cutoff, while we manually sweep the filter's cutoff frequency. You can think of the Revolution as a semi-modular device, but you don't necessarily need to use traditional modifiers such as LFO's. Audio sources can work just as well.
Audio 012:More External Modulation
- Here we are using the same technique as the example above, but using slightly different filter settings, and a different kick drum pattern.
::Revolution Main
::Revolution Specifications
::Download the manual (.pdf)
::Factory Patterns & Songs (SysEx, zipped)