Marc Aubele – dB-ele

1. Favourite knob or fader or switch on a piece of gear and why?

Varispeed knob

The pitch control on my modded Walkmans.. This lets me tune my tape loop drones and samples to other musicians and play the tape like a synth / pitched instrument. It’s hard to measure the exact range but i figure its approximately +/- 2 octaves.

2. Do you have an ‘almost’ perfect bit of kit? What would you change?

This combines sampling with real time pitching, looping and FX.. most people here probably know all about it I’ve had nearly all the Kaoss pads in my musical kit at various times but in my opinion Korg hit perfection with this
device. Every rebuild or updated KP never got near- it’s so hands on it feels like a guitar or a synth It’s hard to find a fault but to be over picky, the external midi sync (which i never use) is not great.

Kaoss Pad

3. What setup do you bring on holiday or tour or commute etc.?

I always travel light so its my Laptop. The act of travel I always find inspirational. the sense of motion and chaos all around is a crazy energy and i like to work in the midst of that. I’m generally doing video work (Davinci Resolve) or Ableton while in transit.

4. What software do you wish was hardware and vice versa?

Granular synthesis -there are a few great plugins for this- i’d love a hardware version with real time input if possible.. i know there is a Mutable device out there but i don’t own one. perhaps ill get me one for Christmas I’d love if it was possible to emulate a Tapeloop in software.. I’ve tried (badly) coding something like this a few times and there is something approaching an emu on my website, but it’s so basic and doesn’t get near what you can do with actual tapes.

5. Is there anything you regret selling… or regret buying?

I once owned a Fender Rhodes.. When i bought it me and a buddy carried about 1km back to my house because we couldn’t get a taxi to stop.. it was so heavy! i sold it at a
time when i really needed cash.. it paid the rent that month. On buying.. no. if i don’t like something i’ll usually sell it on or gift it. I’m quite active in the second hand market.

6. What gear has inspired you to produce the most music?

Its 2 fold.. I started out in music playing guitar, recording into tape machines.. firstly boom boxes and standard tape machines (anything that would record basically) soon into this journey i needed to start dubbing so 4-tracks and eventually reel to reel machines. I still use this setup alot but nowadays the process is often in reverse.

Tape reel-to-reel

7. If you had to start over, what would you get first?

A good workhorse hardware polyphonic synth with 2 or 3 oscillators and a great filter / LFO.. You can do so much with synthesis that you can’t do with most other instruments on their own.

8. What’s the most annoying piece of gear you have, that
you just can’t live without?

Again its the PWM modded tape players I use for live performances. Because the machines are so old and fragile and i can’t resist tweaking the mods they are often breaking down. that’s why i always have 2 in my rig so i can at least guarantee i’ll get a sound out of one of them.

9. Most surprising tip or trick or technique that you’ve discovered about a bit of kit?

I enjoy it when you can make a piece of kit “play itself” like the krell patch in modular world or when you get a synth to self oscillate or a guitar to feedback and you start playing, or more precisely trying to control the instrument.


Artist or Band name?

Marc Aubele

Genre?

Anti Pop

Selfie?

Marc Aubele

Where are you from?

I grew up in the cotswolds in the english countryside but spent time in Germany as a teenager before coming back to London to go to College. I’m half Irish, half German and i now live in a very rural area of Wexford which i adore. I genuinely feel at home in any of these 3 countries.

Wexford

How did you get into music?

As a kid i was completely obsessed by football/soccer and was heading towards a career in sports until a new music teacher arrived at the school in Frankfurt. I was around 13 at the time and in the first lesson of term, at the start of the class, the Teacher pulled out a record player and played 3 songs. “Battery” by Metallica, “Satisfaction” by the Stones and “I don’t need no doctor” by WASP. my parents played
alot of music in the house and in the car but it was a lot of 60s and 70s stuff.. I had never heard anything like the heavy metal before. i went out with my pocket money that weekend and bought Master of Puppets and a Stones greatest hits which was as
far as the pocket money stretched. I stopped playing sports immediately and got a guitar for my next birthday. I played literally every waking moment outside of school, learning songs by listening to them and playing along and i gone then.

What still drives you to make music?

If you fall hard into it I think music is something like a vocation rather than a trade or a hobby. Every time i step into my studio I feel something like inocent. I love that you can walk in to the space and when you walk out something exists that didn’t before.

Studio wall

How do you most often start a new track?

I’m sometimes pulled into the studio because an idea drops into my head and i need to go and work it out.. sometimes i just sit down with the gear because i’m bored. Typically i start with Tape, synth or guitar i never start with a beatloop for example and just “see what happens”.. Also playing with other people helps bring things out. I’ve been playing with an improvised ensemble “Der-Aunch-A-Thon” for a little over a year now.. We do gigs where we improvise every note from start to finish of the gig. It’s exhilarating as you don’t know whats happening beyond the moment you’re in and you exist in the moment of creation all the time. Last thing we did was go to a house in Donegal where we built “a studio” on the Friday, played all night and all
Saturday and left on Sunday. We will be releasing that in some form either late this year or early next. It will be a long form work.

How do you know when a track is finished?

Marge the cat

I think you just have to call it. Often demos are better than the finished article, often a session is finished when My Cat Marjorie wants us to go to bed

Show us your current studio

Studio corner

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

“It’s the goal of every artist to give of their very best just once” – a friend once wrote that in a dedication of a book he gave me. The book was Barfly by Charles Bukowski. That was a long time ago and it still inspires me.

Promote your latest thing… Go ahead, throw us a link

This is my last long form release.. it’s called “There is a Chasm between what is Said and what is Done” Pt1


Cormac O’Halloran – DJ Kormac

1. Favourite knob or fader or switch on a piece of gear and why?

Sequential Circuits Prophet 6 slop knob

I’ve recently bought a Sequential Circuits Prophet 6 for a new score I’m working on and it’s got this curious SLOP button in the middle. It adds randomised tuning stability to emulate the tuning instability of vintage analog oscillators. It brings a lovely degree of “wonkiness,” immediately makes sounds a little more curious and it’s fantastic when used in conjunction with the Pan Spread knob.

2. Do you have an ‘almost’ perfect bit of kit? What would you change?

I really like where my modular case is at the moment. It’s quite a simple configuration, but ticks a lot of boxes for me creatively. A lot of it is based around the new Moog Labyrinth semi modular and some make noise bits and I’ve got their four-zone bus case, which I love. It’s also great for live shows. I have a Doepfer spring reverb module and tank and I’ve been meaning to add a second one of these so that I might have a stereo reverb. The plan is to send the output from the Mimeophone into this new stereo spring reverb for strange sounding delays.

Doepfer spring reverb module and tank

3. What setup do you bring on holiday or tour or commute etc.?

I travel to London a good bit to attend mix sessions for Film/TV and I’ll generally just go with my laptop, drives, dongles etc and my Universal Audio Apollo Twin X. It’s a really solid audio interface, runs my UAD plugins and the preamps are good for recording on the go if I need to.  

DJ Kormac Live setup – at The Playground artist studios in Dublin, Ireland, June 2025.

4. What software do you wish was hardware and vice versa?

I’d really like it if the Universal Audio Console software had a dedicated hardware controller of some sort. Everything in my studio is connected directly into 2 Apollo x 8s so I’d buy that in a heartbeat! 

The Overstayer Stereo Modular Channel gets a huge amount of use here. If there was a software version, that sounded as good (which I’d be dubious about tbh!) I’d have it on everything. 

5. Is there anything you regret selling… or regret buying?

I had a Buchla Easel Command for a while and never warmed to it. I got a few bits out of it, but I never got really excited about playing it. And it was a nightmare to get that sequencer playing in tune. I guess that’s kinda the point of some of the Buchla stuff. After a while it was just sitting there so I replaced it with the Tip Top Audio/Buchla 258T oscillator for my modular rig (at about 1/10th of the cost of the Easel) and moved it on.

6. What gear has inspired you to produce the most music?

Of late, I’ve been finding the Soma Pulsar 23 drum machine hugely inspiring. It’s great for starting tracks as it tends to spit out patterns and sounds that I wouldn’t have naturally just dialled in – which is exactly what I’m looking for. 

Soma Pulsar 23 drum machine and Lyra drone machine

I love sending a voltage to the “MAD” pin on the FX section. This can give you a weird, circuit bent sounding version of your pattern which, when smashed through the Overstayer or a Culture Vulture, can be a very inspiring place to start a track. 

I did this exact thing on my new single, Down Below (see below.)   

7. If you had to start over, what would you get first?

Probably the Overstayer Modular Channel. I actually waited for mine for about 2 years so it would be a good idea to get the order in. This was during Covid and I’m sure they’ve sorted that out now. 

Overstayer Modular Channel

8. What’s the most annoying piece of gear you have, that you just can’t live without?

I’m not sure if it is gear but probably Logic Audio. 

I only use it for writing cues when I’m scoring Film/TV as it can send out time code to sync Pro Tools (which houses my video file[s,] dialog etc.) 

I use Ableton a lot so when I switch to Logic, I just find it a bit clunky and unintuitive and there seems to be an endless amount of menu diving involved. Certain functions you’d expect to be able to perform easily and to be placed front and centre are a bit hidden away – which can be frustrating. 

If Ableton had rock solid timecode functionality I’d be much happier there…

9. Most surprising tip or trick or technique that you’ve discovered about a bit of kit?

That’s a tough one! Of late, I think it’s using the “MAD” pin on the Pulsar 23 (described above.) 


Artist or Band name?

Kormac

Genre?

I guess you’d call it Electronica. But there are frequently live players, and even orchestras involved 🙂 

Selfie

DJ Kormac

Where are you from?

I’m from Dublin, Ireland.

How did you get into music?

I started playing guitar and drums when I was 12. I was very influenced by rock, metal, grunge and Sonic Youth. 

What still drives you to make music?

It’s been my job for a long time so, there’s that, but, honestly, if I won the lottery in the morning, I’d still come into the studio the following day. I’m never “finished” with music. I always have a list in my head of the next ten things I want to try and create. Must have been born this way…

How do you most often start a new track?

Ideally, I like to start a new track with a small melodic ostinato or choppy vocal sample that allows me to write chords, bassline and drums around. I’ll often get a small loop going in SLate + Ash’s Cycles software or on my Morphagene and use that as a means to “write around.” In fact, I often end up discarding these initial loops once I’m up and running. Sometimes they’re just the way to kick off the process.

If I’m writing for a picture, it’s completely dictated by what I see in front of me, what’s in the script and the broader idea for the score in general.

How do you know when a track is finished?

Ideally, I’ll have time to live with it for a while, play it at home, in the car etc. and I’ll make some notes about what needs fixing. 

When I’ve made all those changes, it’s usually time to wrap it up. 

Someone told me once, “you don’t finish projects, you abandon them” and there’s definitely a bit of that going on too.

Show us your current studio

DJ Kormac studio
DJ Kormac live setup

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

Inspiration needs to find you working.

Promote your latest thing… Go ahead, throw us a link

Down Below (Feat. Katie Kim from OXN) is out on my Always The Sound label on July 18th.

https://found.ee/kormacdownbelow