Samarkanda 1953 Resampling Delay Performance Station Hands-On Demo

Xaoc Devices shared this hands-on demo of their new Samarkanda 1953 Resampling Delay Performance Station.

The Xaoc Devices Samarkanda is a digital quad delay module, with extensive patching capabilities and a lot of flexibility for signal mangling.

The Samarkanda can be used as four entirely independent delays, a dual stereo delay, a complex/multi-tap or multi-channel delay, a quad/polyphonic resonator, a dual chorus, a dual flanger reverb, a looper (with sound on sound), a granulator, or any combination of these functions.

Samarkanda is also truly modular – you can control almost all its features remotely with CV/gates, and the external feedback path gives you the opportunity to process the delayed signal with other modules.

Here’s a hands-on demo by DivKid:

Features:

  • Quadruple resampling delay
  • Lossless chaining of sections
  • Delay range of 0.5ms to 15 seconds per channel for a total of 60 seconds when stacked
  • Analog (tape-like) and digital (granular) sweep behaviours
  • Continuous, synced, and tap-tempo operation
  • Clock division and multiplication from 1:8 to 8:1
  • Buffer freezing and 1V/oct loop playback control
  • Reverse delay effect
  • Multiple options for coupling channels

Pricing and Availability:

The Samarkanda 1953 Resampling Delay Performance Station is available now for 620 EUR MSRP.

2 thoughts on “Samarkanda 1953 Resampling Delay Performance Station Hands-On Demo

  1. It looks cool. But it also looks like a lot of hard work to end up with a result that is not particularly musical. Knob twiddlers will probably love it.
    I wish them well.

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