about.nfo
Instruments & Loops From the Most Seminal Vocoder of all Time
The VP-330 is a vintage, 10 band analog vocoder and string synth from the late 70s, regarded as one of the best sounding vocoders of all time. It's been used by Laurie Anderson, Midnight Star, Vaneglis, Pink Floyd - the list goes on. And although there have been many vocoders in the decades since its release (including a poor excuse of a remake), the VP-330 still remains the most iconic, continuing to forge expressive and unique vintage vocal textures and sounds.
We've extensively multi-sampled this beauty, cleanly capturing presets through the famous vocoder and lush analog string section, as well as completely customizing patches, vocoding with various input carriers, harmonizing dark strings with an Eventide H3000, synthesizing trashy pads through classic third party hardware (Roland Space Echo), and more.
The History of the Vocoder
Fast forward 70 years and (even though we aren't still fighting Nazis) the vocoder still manages to capture our attention through its balance of robotic and human textures - kind of like the sexy sci-fi cyborg that we still somehow find irresistibly attractive (Battlestar Galactica, anyone?)
The Recording Process
During the recording process we focused primarily on three main categories: the vocoder engine, the synth engine (comprised of a rich sounding vocal ensemble and lush analog strings), and finally, a combo of both vocoder and synth. Lastly, we used the Roland SVC-350 (a rackmount unit featuring the same 10 band vocoder), and pumped drum beats through it to create some wild, melodic and percussive loops.
To capture the vocoder section we experimented with a variety of techniques (sampling a vocoder is challenging, to say the least!). We combined pre-recorded vowels (looping them for sustain) with guttural slurs, and our own oohs and aaws, which ordinarily would sound horrible on their own - but through the VP they become magical, formant-filtered synth voices.
Finally, we slipped in 50 drum-coded percussive loops created with the Roland SVC-350 by running modern and classic drum machines (TR-808, TR-707, Elektron Machinedrum and Analog RYTM ) as the modulating signal, combining them with a Roland Juno-106 as the carrier signal. We also alternated the carrier and modulating signals to maximize weirdness. By the way, we exclusively used Swedish and Japanese hardware :)
The End Result
The results sound something like if Moroder scored the soundtrack to a bunch of robot / aliens invading the bronx in the 1980s - demonic pads, primitive robot sounds, electro vox, and other-worldly FX (ie: what an alien sounds like when you kill it). You'll get over 50 vintage Vocoder and String instruments, and 50 groovy percussive vocoded loops.
The reason the VP-330 remains so relevant and useable after all these years is because of the warmth and classic grit of Roland's oscillators and filters, which, combined with some human formant filtering, result in some seriously warm patches that digital vocoding can't achieve. And while it's impossible to completely capture the beauty of this analog vocoder, we're confident there's a lot of great stuff in here to easily inject some vocoder voodoo into your own productions.
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