Up for sale is the wonderful Music Thing Modular Turing Machine and 2 expansions, Volts and Pulses
Selling as I am getting out of Eurorack. Check my other listings for more
Uk bidders and UK postage only please. Will be sent special delivery
The Turing Machine makes music for you. It's a binary sequencer, based around a 16 bit memory circuit called a shift register. It’s a sequencer that you cansteerin one direction or another, not one that you can program precisely.
You cannot program this sequencer to play specific tunes. You cannot save sequences. You can never go back to a sequence that has changed.
To put it another way: the Turing Machine producesclocked stepped randomly changing control voltages. In other words, melodies, basslines, sequences. Unlike many random voltage generators, these sequences can be locked into loops that repeat according to the length control.
The Turing Machine has become one of the most popular Eurorack DIY projects since June 2012. The#turingmachine tag on Instagramcontains lots of great demos (and a certain amount of the real Alan Turing).
Turing Machine Expanders connect to the back of the module, and take the sequence from the main module and use it in different ways:
Voltsadds an extra voltage output, with the sequence set by five pots.
Pulsesturns the sequence into beats: eleven rhythmic pulse-train outputs.
Voltagesadds two CV outputs controlled by 8 faders.
Vactrol Mixis a sequencer controlled matrix mixer. It's fantastic for rhythmically cutting up audio, stereo panning and feedback loops, but a little hard to explain.
In the Turing Machine, looping is controlled by the big knob.
At noon, the sequences are random.
At 5 o'clock, it locks into a repeating sequence.
At 7 o'clock, it double locks into a repeating sequence twice as long as the 'length' setting.
At 3 o'clock or 9 o'clock, it slips; looping but occasionally changing notes.
Musically, the module was inspired by 60s and 70s minimalist process music by people like Steve Reich, Terry Riley or Philip Glass:“I am interested in perceptible processes. I want to be able to hear the process happening throughout the music.To facilitate closely detailed listening a musical process should happen extremely gradually.”Steve Reich,Music as a Gradual Process, 1968
While designing the Turing Machine, I compiled thisRandom Reading Listwhich includes notes on the history of random sequence generators from Marvin Minsky's Muse to Don Buchla's Source of Uncertainty to Doepfer's A-149 module.
Tony Surgeon is a long-time Turing Machine user.In this workshop from 2016he shows how he uses it to generate sequences which are then looped on an Octatrack.
Turing Machine is open source, which has inspired many offshoots, alternative panels and third party expanders, including:
The Turing Machine isnota real Turing Machinethe way Alan Turing explained it. The name is vaguely relevant because the module uses a loop of data being changed, but the similarity ends there. It's certainly not a 'probabilistic random sequence generator based on the research of Alan Turing' ;-).
Theoriginal Mk1 documentationcontains more detail about how the Turing Machine works, including a block diagram.
The Turing Machine is a fairly straightforward through-hole DIY build, but it's fairly dense and takes a while to complete, so probably shouldn't be a first DIY project (I always recommend Mikrophonie or Mini Drive as first builds). Build documents areavailable from Thonk. If you get stuck, theGithub Issue Listis probably the best place to start - remember to check closed issues as well as open ones.