In French cooking, there’s a sauce base called a roux (pronounced “roo”) that is the foundation of bechamel and other sauces. Update: hey, this is back online now at ! Awesome! Also see here where I’ve built an updated version of the Roux macro that is used in this tutorial. Well, the product is defunct and the old site is down, so here is the first in a series on the Roux sequencer macro, showing how it can be used to manipulate the read position in a basic grain delay. This is part of a set of tutorials I did for Peter Kirn’s Kore site back in 2008 – we were creating materials that highlighted Native Instruments products and how they could be used in Kore. Basic Sequencer for Anything in Reaktor: The Roux, Part 1 This entry was posted in download and tagged builders, Euclidean, java, Martin Wood-Mitrovski, multitext, node, Sample Map, Scripting on Novemby peterdines. In the meantime Martin’s tool is a great shortcut Reaktor builders can use right now. I think this highlights the need for a scripting language built into Reaktor just as one is in Kontakt – the ability to address text fields from a script would overcome hours of wrist strain from laboriously entering data in MultiText modules. This is a command line tool but it’s extremely simple to use if you’ve ever run anything from a command line, ever:
#REAKTOR DOWNLOAD UPDATE#
One is an update of his sample map builder, which now comes bundled with a built in Java runtime in the OS X version so you don’t have to fiddle around with installing and configuring a JRE.Īnother is a node.js based tool to generate Reaktor multitext macros from a text file. Now Martin has graciously shared with us a couple of other tools.
#REAKTOR DOWNLOAD HOW TO#
User Daniel Wincott uploaded an ensemble to the user library demonstrating how to do this. Just drop it into your Blocks ensemble and use the output to drive, for example, some drum sounds. Recently he’s also uploaded a Blocks version that makes it easy to incorporate Euclidean sequences in your Blocks based ensembles: Some of you may already know Martin as the creator of this great Euclidean sequencer for Reaktor.