Eurorack format from Ciat-Lonbarde
Text by Peter Blasser
The Fourses module consists of four bounds/bounce oscillators, stacked on top of each other so that their bounds are mutual. Imagine four bouncy balls in a greased perspex tube only wide enough to permit them to travel along it. They bounce off of each other in the tube, and generate intricate but inter-related chaotic outputs. Each bouncy ball has the requisite basis and attenuverter knobs, and bounds inserts, control input, and triangular output.
Fourses is a 12HP Eurorack module that runs on +12 and -12 volts. Attach power connector positive to “+” and negative to “-”. Failure to follow proper power polarity will result in instant destruction of unit.
Looking at the front panel of Fourses, note that inputs are marked by copper fill. The four operators are exactly the same in appearance. The bounds of any operator are dictated by the ones immediately above and below, except for the very top and bottom operators; the top upper bound is set to eight volts, and the bottom lower bound to negative eight volts. The bounds of any operator, however, have inserts that you can use to manually set a boundary to whatever voltage you wish. This may introduce Ieaskul's masthead, the paradox wave, that comes about when a lower bound is greater than an upper bound, causing the oscillator to go into hyper oscillation since it cannot rest in any stable zone.
Connected to the bounds inserts area, there is a rate knob that acts in a special, Fourses-like way: knob in middle causes the up- and down- slopes to be equally fast, and the operator will bounce easily; turn the knob clockwise and it will have a very slow down-slope and a fast up-slope, counter-clockwise is the opposite. The philosophical reasons for such a knob came about when testing the original fourses; control of slope symmetry is just as important as, or perhaps more important than, control of frequency in Fourses. The control input, with associated attenuverter also controls frequency and symmetry in the same way. An attenuverter works like this: at noon the modulations are nulled out, they have no effect; clockwise from there they increase in intensity, with positive input meaning “more”; to the counter-clockwise direction, modulations increase as well, but with
negative input meaning “more”. This knob is essential to controlling how much, and in which direction, your modulations apply.
The “position out” can hardly be called “triangle out” anymore, but it is the same electronically as would a triangle output- a reading of the current position of each bouncy ball.
For each operator there is a range switch. When in middle position, the operator runs at a standard audio rate. Pointing downward is a low audio rate, and pointing upwards is a definite CV, lowest rate.
History of Fourses
Fourses was originally released by Ciat-Lonbarde in kit format, around the time of the Bush-years. It had two of the “greased perspex tube” formations, plus some interstitial circuitry called the “intersexon”. Ieaskul is considering putting out an expansion module to create this intersexon between two Fourses modules, but you could probably cook up a recipe that would be very similar with stock Eurorack sample-and-hold modules; simply trigger a sample of one Fourses by another Fourses, and make these step-like signals available again for modulation. The thing that is hard for a Eurorack system to mimic, is how the intersexon used current mirrors on the outputs; outputs thus would mix in a unique, non-ohmic melange of competing current sources. Eurorack, and the modular philosophy in general, does not condone modulation by current vector, only preferring outputs to be voltage in series with a 10k resistor. Actually current mixing could be an interesting route to explore for modulator-masters, but it is a subtle region. It was only brought about because the Fourses was a touchable instrument, having about 156 brass nodes sticking up out of a wooden case, that could be patched by both wire or flesh, or even a living worm. It was part of a general exploration of mixing signals to use current as one source of output electrons.
Another inspiration was the circuit-bending movement, and the use of innards of circuits, exposed to musical touch. Thus, Fourses was an instrument designed to be bent, and it did this by bringing the interior, “soft-like” parts of each oscillator out. The two most important would be called the “capacitor tank,” and the “hysteresis node,” which correspond directly to the bounce/bounds dialectic as well as that of the triangle/square. You see any triangle oscillator has an accumulator of analog slope, using a capacitor to make angled segments; and a bounds tester, comparing against a fixed (or not so fixed) measure. Since the capacitor tank deals mostly in current anyway, this was a good tip-off to make current-nodes in the overall design.
In bringing back the Fourses, ten years later, all these touch-operable features were explored in numerous prototype paper-circuits, and they worked as in the original. However, the Fourses modular does not include such extended touch-features, because it is a redundancy on top of the central concept; Fourses itself is a modeling of a sort of inter-related touch web, by having each oscillator “touch” the other. It is a morphic resonance to put a “touch” oscillator inside a “touch” case, but perhaps the use of the Fourses primitive as source of chaos could be distilled down into a small form factor with complete voltage control and range switches, to interface and scramble all sorts of other modules with its manifold outputs. Perhaps in the future we could bring back the touch-Fourses, but Ieaskul is confident that fitting it into the Eurorack standard is a happy compromise to bring its unique sounds and gestures to “Europe”.
trying to keep with original idea:
- A sound of closely tuned oscillators bouncing off of each other, chaotic fuzz. If the operators share a similar frequency then they become indistinguishable, like bosons.
- far tuned oscillators including low frequency ones brings out grains, striations, or beats in the texture. This is why tuning symmetry and frequency at the same time is important: slopes pointing away from each other create harder boundaries.
- intersexon provides a counterpoint, or better yet “motif b” for the instrument. Now this is out sourced to the Eurorack consortium.
- sandrodes are nodes that are highly touchable. they are hard to implement because they represent both input and output: the instrument has to be tied up, but have a highly sweet “ground state”... it is the action of crossing all these nodes that changes its state, ties it up more, making touch sensitivity, wireability...
- “goal based design” --- tansas city station --- transmitter > noise > receiver
How much is my shipping?
Shipping is automatically calculated before you submit your payment information. Simply add items to your cart and proceed to the checkout page, where you'll be offered shipping options and their prices. In the UK it's normally around £4 for order values under £150, and free above that. Shipping to mainland EU is typically between £7 and £20, depending on the shipping method and the size and weight of the order.
Do you ship to my country?
Almost certainly - the site will give you an estimate of shipping costs if you add an item to the cart and then enter your country and postcode. If you have specific requirements (such as if you prefer UPS over FedEx, for example) then let us know in advance and we'll try to work something out for you.
Shipping methods
We use a combination of Parcelforce, DPD, Royal Mail and UPS for the UK, and for international orders it's either Royal Mail, UPS, DHL or FedEx depending on where you are in the world. If you have a particular preference then try to let us know BEFORE you order so we can look into it for you. Please note that there may occasionally be additional shipping charges if you live in a remote area, depending on what surcharges are applied by the shipper. We'll get in touch to discuss this with you in such cases.
Dispatch times
For UK orders, we normally dispatch the same working day if we get the order before 15:00. If you have a really urgent situation then of course drop us an email before ordering and we'll always do our absolute best to accommodate you.
For international orders, we normally dispatch the same day if we get the order before 13:00 but again, occasionally it might be the next day before we can send it out, and sometimes FedEx or UPS may come a little earlier than scheduled which would also push an order into the next day.
Shipping times
Since April 2020 the couriers we use have suspended guarantees for shipping times, so even though we're paying them for priority services - 24-48 hours for most of the world - in practice it's often an extra day on top and sometimes it can be longer.
There is absolutely nothing we can do about this unfortunately. If you are outside the UK and it's a life-or-death situation where you absolutely MUST have that passive mult for the next day then... it may be better to find a local supplier.
Saturday shipping
If you're in the UK and you order before 15:30 on a Friday then we can send something for a Saturday delivery (NB: this applies to UK mainland addresses only). The success rate with DPD is about 95% so it's worth a punt most of the time. Please note that if you select Saturday shipping on an order placed earlier in the week, we'll wait until Friday to ship it.
Pre-orders
If a product is listed as a pre-order, it means we've ordered it from the supplier but it's not physically in stock yet. The product listing will include an estimated shipping date based on the best information we have from the supplier, but do bear in mind this is subject to change and is not a guaranteed date.
If you place an order containing a mixture of in-stock and pre-order items, we'll normally hold off on shipping anything until the pre-order item(s) have arrived, rather than splitting it into multiple shipments. If you need the in-stock items sooner, we'd recommend placing separate orders. As always, please get in touch if you have questions.
Product Overview
Eurorack format from Ciat-Lonbarde
Text by Peter Blasser
The Fourses module consists of four bounds/bounce oscillators, stacked on top of each other so that their bounds are mutual. Imagine four bouncy balls in a greased perspex tube only wide enough to permit them to travel along it. They bounce off of each other in the tube, and generate intricate but inter-related chaotic outputs. Each bouncy ball has the requisite basis and attenuverter knobs, and bounds inserts, control input, and triangular output.
Fourses is a 12HP Eurorack module that runs on +12 and -12 volts. Attach power connector positive to “+” and negative to “-”. Failure to follow proper power polarity will result in instant destruction of unit.
Looking at the front panel of Fourses, note that inputs are marked by copper fill. The four operators are exactly the same in appearance. The bounds of any operator are dictated by the ones immediately above and below, except for the very top and bottom operators; the top upper bound is set to eight volts, and the bottom lower bound to negative eight volts. The bounds of any operator, however, have inserts that you can use to manually set a boundary to whatever voltage you wish. This may introduce Ieaskul's masthead, the paradox wave, that comes about when a lower bound is greater than an upper bound, causing the oscillator to go into hyper oscillation since it cannot rest in any stable zone.
Connected to the bounds inserts area, there is a rate knob that acts in a special, Fourses-like way: knob in middle causes the up- and down- slopes to be equally fast, and the operator will bounce easily; turn the knob clockwise and it will have a very slow down-slope and a fast up-slope, counter-clockwise is the opposite. The philosophical reasons for such a knob came about when testing the original fourses; control of slope symmetry is just as important as, or perhaps more important than, control of frequency in Fourses. The control input, with associated attenuverter also controls frequency and symmetry in the same way. An attenuverter works like this: at noon the modulations are nulled out, they have no effect; clockwise from there they increase in intensity, with positive input meaning “more”; to the counter-clockwise direction, modulations increase as well, but with
negative input meaning “more”. This knob is essential to controlling how much, and in which direction, your modulations apply.
The “position out” can hardly be called “triangle out” anymore, but it is the same electronically as would a triangle output- a reading of the current position of each bouncy ball.
For each operator there is a range switch. When in middle position, the operator runs at a standard audio rate. Pointing downward is a low audio rate, and pointing upwards is a definite CV, lowest rate.
History of Fourses
Fourses was originally released by Ciat-Lonbarde in kit format, around the time of the Bush-years. It had two of the “greased perspex tube” formations, plus some interstitial circuitry called the “intersexon”. Ieaskul is considering putting out an expansion module to create this intersexon between two Fourses modules, but you could probably cook up a recipe that would be very similar with stock Eurorack sample-and-hold modules; simply trigger a sample of one Fourses by another Fourses, and make these step-like signals available again for modulation. The thing that is hard for a Eurorack system to mimic, is how the intersexon used current mirrors on the outputs; outputs thus would mix in a unique, non-ohmic melange of competing current sources. Eurorack, and the modular philosophy in general, does not condone modulation by current vector, only preferring outputs to be voltage in series with a 10k resistor. Actually current mixing could be an interesting route to explore for modulator-masters, but it is a subtle region. It was only brought about because the Fourses was a touchable instrument, having about 156 brass nodes sticking up out of a wooden case, that could be patched by both wire or flesh, or even a living worm. It was part of a general exploration of mixing signals to use current as one source of output electrons.
Another inspiration was the circuit-bending movement, and the use of innards of circuits, exposed to musical touch. Thus, Fourses was an instrument designed to be bent, and it did this by bringing the interior, “soft-like” parts of each oscillator out. The two most important would be called the “capacitor tank,” and the “hysteresis node,” which correspond directly to the bounce/bounds dialectic as well as that of the triangle/square. You see any triangle oscillator has an accumulator of analog slope, using a capacitor to make angled segments; and a bounds tester, comparing against a fixed (or not so fixed) measure. Since the capacitor tank deals mostly in current anyway, this was a good tip-off to make current-nodes in the overall design.
In bringing back the Fourses, ten years later, all these touch-operable features were explored in numerous prototype paper-circuits, and they worked as in the original. However, the Fourses modular does not include such extended touch-features, because it is a redundancy on top of the central concept; Fourses itself is a modeling of a sort of inter-related touch web, by having each oscillator “touch” the other. It is a morphic resonance to put a “touch” oscillator inside a “touch” case, but perhaps the use of the Fourses primitive as source of chaos could be distilled down into a small form factor with complete voltage control and range switches, to interface and scramble all sorts of other modules with its manifold outputs. Perhaps in the future we could bring back the touch-Fourses, but Ieaskul is confident that fitting it into the Eurorack standard is a happy compromise to bring its unique sounds and gestures to “Europe”.
trying to keep with original idea:
- A sound of closely tuned oscillators bouncing off of each other, chaotic fuzz. If the operators share a similar frequency then they become indistinguishable, like bosons.
- far tuned oscillators including low frequency ones brings out grains, striations, or beats in the texture. This is why tuning symmetry and frequency at the same time is important: slopes pointing away from each other create harder boundaries.
- intersexon provides a counterpoint, or better yet “motif b” for the instrument. Now this is out sourced to the Eurorack consortium.
- sandrodes are nodes that are highly touchable. they are hard to implement because they represent both input and output: the instrument has to be tied up, but have a highly sweet “ground state”... it is the action of crossing all these nodes that changes its state, ties it up more, making touch sensitivity, wireability...
- “goal based design” --- tansas city station --- transmitter > noise > receiver
Technical Specs
Shipping Details
How much is my shipping?
Shipping is automatically calculated before you submit your payment information. Simply add items to your cart and proceed to the checkout page, where you'll be offered shipping options and their prices. In the UK it's normally around £4 for order values under £150, and free above that. Shipping to mainland EU is typically between £7 and £20, depending on the shipping method and the size and weight of the order.
Do you ship to my country?
Almost certainly - the site will give you an estimate of shipping costs if you add an item to the cart and then enter your country and postcode. If you have specific requirements (such as if you prefer UPS over FedEx, for example) then let us know in advance and we'll try to work something out for you.
Shipping methods
We use a combination of Parcelforce, DPD, Royal Mail and UPS for the UK, and for international orders it's either Royal Mail, UPS, DHL or FedEx depending on where you are in the world. If you have a particular preference then try to let us know BEFORE you order so we can look into it for you. Please note that there may occasionally be additional shipping charges if you live in a remote area, depending on what surcharges are applied by the shipper. We'll get in touch to discuss this with you in such cases.
Dispatch times
For UK orders, we normally dispatch the same working day if we get the order before 15:00. If you have a really urgent situation then of course drop us an email before ordering and we'll always do our absolute best to accommodate you.
For international orders, we normally dispatch the same day if we get the order before 13:00 but again, occasionally it might be the next day before we can send it out, and sometimes FedEx or UPS may come a little earlier than scheduled which would also push an order into the next day.
Shipping times
Since April 2020 the couriers we use have suspended guarantees for shipping times, so even though we're paying them for priority services - 24-48 hours for most of the world - in practice it's often an extra day on top and sometimes it can be longer.
There is absolutely nothing we can do about this unfortunately. If you are outside the UK and it's a life-or-death situation where you absolutely MUST have that passive mult for the next day then... it may be better to find a local supplier.
Saturday shipping
If you're in the UK and you order before 15:30 on a Friday then we can send something for a Saturday delivery (NB: this applies to UK mainland addresses only). The success rate with DPD is about 95% so it's worth a punt most of the time. Please note that if you select Saturday shipping on an order placed earlier in the week, we'll wait until Friday to ship it.
Pre-orders
If a product is listed as a pre-order, it means we've ordered it from the supplier but it's not physically in stock yet. The product listing will include an estimated shipping date based on the best information we have from the supplier, but do bear in mind this is subject to change and is not a guaranteed date.
If you place an order containing a mixture of in-stock and pre-order items, we'll normally hold off on shipping anything until the pre-order item(s) have arrived, rather than splitting it into multiple shipments. If you need the in-stock items sooner, we'd recommend placing separate orders. As always, please get in touch if you have questions.