Make Noise - Bruxa
- Order number: 240339
- Depth: 48
Bruxa from Make noise is a witchcraft alchemy delay experiment developed in collaboration with Alessandro Cortini.
Sonic alchemists! Make noise is back with another cool module. Nope, this isn’t a follow-up to their now discontinued Erbe-Verb but rather it’s a device built on the DNA that made up the time/filter section of the Strega. And just like its predecessor this module was made in collaboration with Alessandro Cortini.
So what is it? Essentially it’s a multi-tap delay line featuring over a dozen unique feedback paths, each containing multiple filters. These filters are designed to facilitate the accumulation of noise, saturation, and signal degradation. The Time control lets you smoothly change the delay time, making your sounds stretch or shrink in interesting ways. It also has a Linear FM input that lets you add a fluttering effect to the Time control. The Absorb and Filter knobs allow you to shape your echoes and how they decay thereby adding another layer of depth and texture.
Worth noting is that the Bruxa, even though it shares some of the sonic characteristics of the Strega, has a different profile. It comes with its own peculiarities and can deliver results that are surprisingly different from its larger counterpart.
Please note: Limited run only, so get your mittens on this module before it’s too late!
Features:
- Echoverb signal processor similar to Strega
- Wide-range analog CV inputs suitable for audio rate modulation
- Combines analog dry signal with hybrid digital/analog processing
- Time control with massive, smoothly variable range
- Linear FM input with an attenuator allows for fluttering effects
- Absorb and Filter controls for shaping echo tone and reflections
- New unique CV outputs for use in self-patching or mutual patching with other modules
HE: | 3 |
TE: | 18 |
Depth: | 48 |
Power consumption +12V: | 140 |
Power consumption -12V: | 90 |
Bruxa @Make Noise
Already interested in electronics at the early age of 12, Tony Rolando learned everything about circuits and musical instrument design by himself. He worked for Moog Music for a while and some sabbatical years, he founded Make Noise in 2008 in Asheville, North Carolina. By now, his reinterpretation of the Serge DUSG, Maths, is probably the most ubiquitous module in the eurorack universe ever. Make Noise continues to surprise with new and inspiring modules, including collaborations with Tom Erbe of Soundhack.