A stereo field is a single instrument that involves several uses: it is a stereo audio processor, a pressure-sensitive controller, and a stereo modular touch plate feedback atonal synth. You can employ the three either separately or simultaneously.
Moreover, it is a device that allows the user to control two analog stereo preamplifier circuits using touch plates. When the user applies skin conductivity, new circuits and new sounds generate. Each touch plate connects to every element within its circuitry. So, when touched, atonal analog feedback emerges. A stereo field is capable of creating atonal synth tones in stereo while processing these incoming sources.
Stereo Field: the Setup
You should set the stereo field from left to right and from front to back. In addition, when you mix a track, you can set the instruments in a specific location. Overall, it involves creating a sonic picture that replicates what the human ears can hear in the real world. For this reason, it includes panning, reverb, and delay. When mixing a track, the user visualizes the exact location for each musical instrument.
CV Modulation
A stereo field can both send and receive CV modulation simultaneously while the user changes and alters the incoming and outgoing CV and processes the incoming audio. You can patch these ins and outs together to achieve sustained tones with accurate pitch, volume, rhythm, and cutoff. And you can do so by adjusting the incoming and outgoing volume knobs. Within the stereo field, both processed audio and synthesized audio are available at the same time. Furthermore, they are capable of influencing each other. Finally, because the user applies pressure directly on the analog circuitry, s/he can access shifts in timbre, pitch, modulation easily.