Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Korg SQ-1 :

 Korg SQ-1 Step Sequencer




What Can I say about the SQ1 that you wouldn't have already picked up within thirty seconds in front of a google search bar?   Not much, but let me give you my opinion anyway.

This device is currently a bit of a niche product, being that analogue/cv implementation isn't exactly on top of the world's manufacturer's list right now but unless you've been hiding under a rock for the last three years like me you'll be begining to suspect that that might be about to change.  I know I'm not the first person to notice the rise in cv implimentation on new gear right?
Perhaps the companies that be have finally noticed the demand, perhaps it is just a cheaper way to produce?  To be honest I don't care why it's making a come back I'm just glad of it...
Either way like many people who have got hold of one of these Korg units I needed something to do a job amd this black box with flashing lights ticked all the metaphorical boxes.

So what is it like?
Well it 'feels like it should', by that I mean it feels like a product that is built to last... heavy, sturdy feeling.  The kind of weight that suggests it is a quality product. 
The buttons?  Likewise, chunky rubber like the Electribe range im so fond of.
The small dials however I'm not so sure about, put it this way I'll be careful not to drop it.

Ease of use?
Fiddlyness of those small dials aside it is pretty straight forward, it behaves in the way you would expect it too... assuming all you expect is a handy box for on the fly pattern sequencing or as a useful trigger device.  There are certainly more powerful step sequencers out there, but not many that are both in the <£100 price range AND portable.


I got mine because despite already owning a room full of sequencers I required a cv-capable sequencer that could work in unusual time signatures to send gate signals to a drum module, and that was about it.  Just one single application, and i have to admit it did the job as well as expected.
The only problem with the SQ-1 for this application (and I suspect for many other situations) is it's limited in/out possibilities meant I had to make it the primary sequencer, rather than a slave (driving a chain of MIDI and CV sequencers) as for some reason I cannot fathom Korg did not make it capable of recieving MTC (MIDI OUT only).   But I can't entirely count that as a flaw as as far as I was concerned (at the time) I considered the MIDI OUT as a bonus, it meant I could make use of the note quantising features at a later point on a 303 module that doesn't have a built in sequencer rather than use a larger midi sequencer.


To be honest I'm not a fan (infact Im something of the anti-fan) of Korg's recent mini module range (Volca and the like) but this little box has me optomistic that Korg's "let's throw it in a cheap plastic enclosure" mentality has come to an end.  ...When something feels like a toy it doesn't fill the end user with the required confidence that it wont fall apart and this does feel professional enough to merit some serious experimentation.
It's size, although fiddly when it comes to changing those value dials, is also a bonus...  Small enough to slot in between midi gear on a restricted surface area and also small enough to fit near (or on) a modular setup for patching.   ...and if it is going to be used as part of a modular setup I can imagine it wouldnt be too dificult to DIY-mount it in to a modular enclosure permenentaly by adapting blank spacer panels.



The sequencer's biggest bonus for me is its ability to be split in to two (8nt) parallel patterns, for my uses this is particularly handy!   It means I can use it to trigger two modules or up to two pairs of sequenced cv signals in to the eurorack (whilst freeing up a MDI/CV module for other things).
So, unlike the similarly priced "lets throw them in a plastic enclosure" range of small boxes from Korg I'd have to give this little sequencer my stamp of approval.  ^_^




Korg SQ:1 Specifications  : 
  • Sequencer Mode ALTERNATE, ORDER, PARALLEL TURN, PARALLEL ORDER, CV/DUTY, CV/SLIDE, CV/DUTY RADOM, RANDOM
  • Step Mode GATE ON/OFF, ACTIVE STEP, SLIDE, STEP JUMP
  • Sequence Step Resolution quarter notes, eighth notes, sixteenth notes
  • CV OUT Pitch Linear, Minor, Major, Chromatic
  • CV OUT Voltage 1V, 2V, 5V (Oct) 8V (Hz/V)
  • GATE OUT Polarity + (positive polarity), - (negative polarity)
  • SYNC IN/OUT Polarity + (rise), - (fall)
  • Connectors - littleBits OUT jack (mini monaural phone jack)
  • OUT (MIDI OUT) jack (mini stereo phone jack)
  • CV - A OUT - GATE jack (mini monaural phone jack, CV OUT : Output Level 1V, 2V, 5V, 8[Hz/V], GATE OUT: output level 10V)
  • CV - BOUT - GATE jack (mini monaural phone jack, CV OUT : Output Level 1V, 2V, 5V, 8[Hz/V], GATE OUT: Output Level 10V)
  • IN – SYNC – OUT jack (mini monaural phone jack, SYNC IN: Max Input Level 20V, SYNC OUT: Output Level 5V)
  • USB jack (type B, USB MIDI)
  • Power Supply Two AA batteries OR USB power
  • Battery Life around 5 hours
  • Dimension (W x D x H) 93 x 84 x 63 mm/7.60" x 3.31" × 2.48"
  • Weight 641 g/1.41 lbs.
  • Includes a mini plug – DIN cable (*for outputing tempo etc)




It's been a while...

Hello Internet peruser!

It's been far too long since I wrote something for this blog but thats about to change, so here is a condenced update on the past year :

Due to circumstancial changes I was unable to devote time to blurbing stuff here, what with most of my free time being dedicated to the more rewarding activities of writing music, experimenting with sound design and continued music production ediphication.
I have however still been creating and releasing music, three EPs released via GooglePlay (one of them 29tracks long).

Oh and more recently the music addiction went in a slightly different direction (which will be the subject of my next blog post), let me explain...
Now lets say for example that music production is an addiction akin to a mild narcotic, well my particular addiction went down a slightly more 'more-ish' route.  Having spent the last decade and a half in the MIDI/Software arena I got a taste for 'something a little more';
And where do you go from hardware production?  The answer is obvious ...Go Modular!
And 'going modular' isn't to be rushed in to (we'll not if your like me), the planning process alone took a few months (*but I'll leave that lenghy story for the next blog post)

So, apart from making music and building my modular rig I've also had a bit of an upheaval... Litterally, I moved.
Just imagine having to transfer all your gear from one side of the city to the opposite side!  Never again, I swear never again.  It's taken about two weeks to get everything from one place to the other and two days to re-arrange all the gear in to a logical and useable position. ...And a day and a half to actually get everything patched together.   It's always the same you think something is going to work the way you imagine and then when it comes to plugging stuff together you realise you forgot a crucial thing that means you have to go back to the drawing board eh?  ^_^

hmmm what else?
oh'  ....I bought a TV.  'Thats not interesting, OR music related!' I expect you'll be thinking...
We'll actually it is both, you see....
I havent owned a TV for around 17years.  I hate them.  So why buy one?  Because I realised large TVs are cheaper than large computer monitors.  And thats what I'll be using as a studio monitor.
'The bigger the better' was the phrase that was in mind earlier today when I picked it up, not quite realising quite how large it would be in-use untill I unboxed all 48" of screen a couple of hours ago.
'Thats pretty excessive' you might think to your self, and maybe you'd be right... but what the hell?!
17+years working on 17" screens or less and peering at were the mouse pointer is located whilst editing,  those days are gone my friend!   ^_^

And that also pretty much explains why, after almost a years hiatus from this blog, I have returned.
Having finished setting up the screen on the studio PC and almost finished assembling the studio in the new premisis I thought I'd sit down and try out the new screen.   ...which will do the job nicely ^_^



So that's it,
Time to get back to work for me...
stay productive people!
Peace,
L