Ikigai Cosmonaut – Sonic Auto Magika

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

Func knob as a gateway to Control All

If I had to choose my favorite knob on a device, it would be the Control All in Elektron boxes.

Elektron Digitakt ii

I just love the possibility that one knob allows you to completely flip a sequence and transform it into something completely new. At the same time that option allows you to new realms of sound design, it’s also a great performance tool.

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

I would say that for me, any Elektron box that I have, I can have fun and use it alone. At the moment I have an Elektron Digitone2, the Digitakt 2, and the Syntakt, and most of the time I like to use one machine at a time to take advantage of their full capacity and push my creativity to the limit. The only thing I miss at the moment is any kind of granular engine or machine for the Digitakt 2. For example, I’m a huge fan of granular synthesis, and I wish to see Elektron approach that sometime in the future. 

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

For the holiday, I would take the Elektron Digitone 2. It’s a box totally capable of being used alone for making beats or tracks. It has drums, multiple synth engines, effects, and a powerful sequencer. Also, it’s a pretty versatile box for any type of music or sonic exploration. So no limits exist on this device, which allows both fun for holiday breaks and studio work. 

Elektron Digitone 2

If I had to group a complete setup, I would take the Elektron Digitakt 2 for samples, the Syntakt for analog drums and mono basses, the Digitone 2 for FM synthesis, chords, pianos, and melody work, and the Novation Peak as my favorite polyphonic synth to complete the melody part on the Digitone.

Novation Peak

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

The only software I use at the moment is the Maschine DAW from Native Instruments.

NI Maschine hybrid setup

Several times I thought about making the move to the hardware and purchasing the Maschine Plus, but I like to have these two types of setups, one hybrid for music producing and one totally DAWless that usually takes me to the jamming realm. So for now I’m happy about not changing anything.

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

No regrets. I usually keep gear rotating, mostly because I love to explore different types of hardware, but I hate having too much, so things don’t collect dust for a long time. I keep the only ones I love, but more important for me is the utility I give to them. All the instruments I had have an important role in how I did improve my music and in helping me understand what types of devices fit the most with my particular way of making music. 

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

I have produced most of my music with Maschine from Native Instruments. I worked with it alone for several years, so over time it was that combination of hardware and software, all in one, that allowed me to make most of my music. But the Elektron workflow was the thing that changed the most my view and the way I work nowadays. I was never a fan of sequencers until I put my hands on one Elektron device and understood how powerful it can be. It’s super inspiring the way you can record modulation or make live changes super quick. Also, I have learned a lot about synthesis language by spending a lot of time with one device at a time. At this current time, nothing inspires me more than just grabbing an Elektron box and playing with it with no purpose at all. 

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

If I had to start over again with the knowledge about music production I have today, I would pick Elektron Digitone 2. It’s my desert island device at the moment; I just love its versatility, workflow, and the sonic diving that the device allows you. Also, 16 tracks and voices, combined with effects, a bunch of modulation, and the powerful sequencer, offer almost everything I need if I had to start over. 

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

At the moment no piece of gear annoys me; if that’s so, it’s time to go. 

But I’m still using a DAW to produce at this point, so if I can pick a computer as gear, this is it.

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

It’s really hard for me to pick one trick; I love tricks, and I try to learn as many as I can. 

But lately I’m using more and more ghost notes both on melodies and drums. They add a lot of groove and expression, and on melodies they work great to shuffle a bit on a harp or a sequence. When you decrease the chance of playing them in sequence and lock some parameters to them, they work great to spice up a bit something that you want to keep playing for a long time but have some unpredictable notes showing up now and then along the way. 

Elektron Digitakt ii

Sometimes simple and classic tricks are those that work the best. 


Artist or Band name?

Ikigai Cosmonaut

Genre?

Electronic experimental music

Selfie?

Ikigai Cosmonaut

Where are you from?

Lisbon, Portugal 

How did you get into music?

Music was with me since I was a kid. I started to build my own instruments by the age of 5 or 6 years old. At 11, my father gave me an acoustic guitar, and 2 years later, I moved to an electric one. I never had any music training; I have always been self-taught, and the thing I loved the most was composing.
Producing electronic music came later in my life, when I realized that it was possible to make music on my own and not depend on a band or anyone else. I always felt this need to overflow, tell stories, and express my emotions through sound. But the thing I love the most about making music is this kind of conversation you have with gear while creating.

What still drives you to make music?

Curiosity. I’m a super curious person, and my drive has been learning more and more every day.

Getting lost in a world of endless exploration, with no previous decision made in my creations, is something I’m super into. I never know where music is leading me, and I just embrace whatever I’m feeling at that moment. Music for me is a capture of a moment and the relationship you built with the gear you have. The road between getting lost and found at the same time is super motivating for me.

How do you most often start a new track?

Having no rules is always how I approach music making. 

Usually I sit with the gear I have and start sonic exploring until I find something that translates what I’m feeling at that moment. Once I find something that clicks with me, it can be a loop or a specific sound, I keep on building upon that. 

Making music for me is like having a deep conversation. I put myself on it and try to understand what music is trying to say or needs. 

I don’t believe in formulas; for me, music is a capture of a present moment. 

Studio

How do you know when a track is finished?

Usually I build the body of a track pretty fast and lose a lot of time on details that most people will never listen to, but for me, I know that one track is finished when the message or story behind it translates through the sound itself. Technically, I’ve learned that I will never be totally happy about the final outcome because I keep on learning and searching for a perfection that doesn’t even exist, so with time I learned to accept it and send it to the world at the point I feel that the feeling is there. 

Show us your current studio

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

The best advice I have ever heard is the same I keep on giving back. Fall in love with the process and not the outcome. As long as you keep passion and self-discipline about music, the best part is the moment you put yourself into it and just enjoy every minute you spend doing it. Have fun, and build your own language of expression. 

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

Singularities Album :
Being curious, I have always felt attracted and fascinated by everything that is unusual and irregular, so, even before moving forward with the creation of the album, there were already some themes in my head that I would like to address previously, so it made sense to attribute a “singularity” as a motif to each track, either in its truth or in the interpretation that I decided to attribute to it. 
Singularities was born from my will to celebrate everything that is unique, so my intention was to create one distinctive sonic aesthetic, for each track, in the way they can live alone as a single or as a group in one big singularity, represented by a journey while listening to them together.

https://ikigai-cosmonaut.bandcamp.com/album/singularities


Ricard Magnusson – Wheel

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

The boring answer is the Cutoff! It’s probably my most used knob after all… If I choose to interpret the question from another angle, and discuss the overall feel of my favourite knobs, I’d say the knobs on my Novation Peak. There is a stiffness to them that makes them feel sturdy and reliable, and a rubberized texture that is really great. The Peak feels like it could survive anything! For me it’s really important to connect with a synth on an aesthetical level, an UI level. It needs to look and feel great and be inspiring. For me that’s the whole point of hardware!

Novation Peak

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

Elektron Model Cycles

There are two pieces of gear that I have recently owned that I liked a lot, but had some shortcomings. First off – The Elektron Model Cycles. Fun, cheap, and almost everything you do on it sounds good. But I really would have liked individual outs on all tracks and the ability to play it like a 6 voice poly. The other thing is the JU-06A, which also is a fantastic piece of kit that just sounds awesome. But why only 4 voices… Bugged me a lot!

Roland JU-06A

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

Since my computer is the only thing I can’t do without when producing, I’d have to start off by saying my Macbook Pro. Just bought the 2020 13” which is a perfect size for me. My Keystep usually tags along as well, it has great feel in the keys and a good size. Add my Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro headphones and I’m all set! All I actually really need, holiday or not!

Macbook Pro and Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro

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

There is a piece of software I always dreamed of having in hardware form: The Sonic Charge Microtonic drum synth. I use it all the time and in all my productions. I really like hardware drum machines, and would really enjoy getting hands-on with the Microtonic in a fully analog hardware form. I would really like a software version of the Boss Tera Echo pedal. Maybe there is one that I haven’t found? I mainly use software effects to be able to tempo sync easily, automate parameters etc, and the Tera Echo is the only thing I haven’t really found a software equivalent of.

Boss Tera Echo TE-2

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

This is a hard one… I have a complicated relation to hardware (even wrote an editorial about it: https://producerhive.com/editorial/confessions-of-a-compulsive-gear-flipper/). I constantly buy and sell stuff. Basically, I regret buying almost everything. I kind of regret selling the Sequential Circuits Pro One I used to own in my 20’s (by the start of the millennium). I owned early on, when I was just getting into synthesizers. I have realized that I didn’t appreciate it enough when I had it… Would love to turn back time an own it again, a beautiful and fun machine! The only synth by Dave Smith that hasn’t failed me… I had a Prophet rev 2 that I had to replace the main controller board on, even though I bought it brand new. Had a Tetra recently with a dead sub oscillator and bad LCD-display. Also owned a Prophet 08 Desktop with encoders that had a life of their own…

Guts of a Prophet rev 2

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

I’d have to say Omnisphere. I keep coming back to it. It has a preset library that never ends, and great modulation options. It always leads me to exciting places I didn’t know existed. When it comes to hardware it’s probably my Novation Peak. It has a perfect balance between complexity and easy tweakability.

Novation Peak and Arturia Keystep

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

Nothing. Well, not really, but I would try to not get too hung up on getting the “right stuff”. Give me a Mac laptop and I’m good to go. I started out with nothing but my computer, not even a midi keyboard. I just entered notes in the Piano roll (in Cakewalk, at the time).

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

I’m trying really hard to live by the code “Don’t get stuff you can’t do without”. But I guess it’s my computer. Can’t do without it when it comes to music making. It’s also many times a source of frustration. I have a new computer now, but the one before it was a real pain. I accidentally poured a cup of coffee (my biggest addiction) over the keyboard, which made it act really irrational. Had it like that for like 6 months before I gave up and got myself a new computer! Computers have historically been a big source of annoyance for me, mostly due to failed hard drives. Nowadays I have a rigorous backup solution, so nothing gets lost.

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

Maybe not that surprising, but at the moment I’m really into random waveform LFO’s, that are key synced. I really like making sequences where each note played gets a random modulation of some parameter. On the Peak you can modulate just about everything which is great fun!


Artist or Band name?

Wheel

Genre?

Electronic music, mostly quite chill. A reviewer once called it Chill-glitch, which kind of sums it up quite well!

Selfie?

Ricard Magnusson aka. Wheel

Where are you from?

Sweden

How did you get into music?

Started playing a nylon string guitar, inspired by my grandfather who played classical guitar. My dad and brother also played a little, so there were always guitars around. Moved on to playing with a progressive death metal band in the mid-nineties. Kind of slowly digressed to synth driven, electronic music from there… How did that happen?

What still drives you to make music?

I need to have a creative outlet that is not about demands or goals, just about being creative and reaching a flow state.

How do you most often start a new track?

I’d say with a pad sound. Most of the time it doesn’t stay in the production, but I’ve always been a sucker for pads, and I use them to set the mood of the production and get some basic chord progressions going.

How do you know when a track is finished?

When I can listen to a track and not instantly come up with things I would like to change, it’s probably close to finished. If I feel the same after not listening to it for a day or two, it’s probably done!

Show us your current studio

It’s constantly changing, and I change up my gear all the time. But the pic shows the current state!

Best creative advice that you’ve ever heard?

Wow, there are lots of advice floating around and I’m guilty of a few myself… But the one thing I try to remember is to not overthink my productions. Let go of the fear and just release stuff!

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

Sure thing! Make sure to check out my editorials at producerhive.com, where I write about the connection between the mind and music production/creativity. You find it all here: https://producerhive.com/author/ricardm/

The latest single I released is found here:

https://open.spotify.com/album/17HQRNPSGUIJRMS4W3yuFa?si=u_SeC-tbQVqGwza_b9J4sg


[Editor: Do you have a favorite tip, trick or way of working with any of the gear from this interview?
Then throw a comment below…
]