I never used them but I got the impression Euroracks were going out of style from the huge spike in electronic musicians talking about them around COVID to only rarely a few years later. Musicians love a good trend to dump money into.
Or maybe it's just the nature of social media to latch on to trendy new toys until they run out of content and move on to the next thing.
I don't think it's going out of style at all, there was a huge spike of chatter about Eurorack during COVID because many people's lives revolved around consumerism.
I still see plenty of acts using modulars, artists are just playing them instead of posting videos of jams on social media.
There's many more options of makers and modules than ever before, I think people are just making music instead of showing off. A quite nice change if I'm honest.
Not surprising that shop links are broken, the whole point of open sourcing was that those products were getting discontinued.
I hate when companies erase any traces of legacy products from their website. But that doesn't seem to be the case here. They made a git repo containing more technical data than available before and products can still be found on their website if you open the "discontinued products" section of shop or search in support page. That's a lot better than what many consumer electronic manufacturers do.
From what I understand these were DIY kits from the beginning so schematics were always available. Gerber files and cc licensing are the main addition.
I never used them but I got the impression Euroracks were going out of style from the huge spike in electronic musicians talking about them around COVID to only rarely a few years later. Musicians love a good trend to dump money into.
Or maybe it's just the nature of social media to latch on to trendy new toys until they run out of content and move on to the next thing.
I don't think it's going out of style at all, there was a huge spike of chatter about Eurorack during COVID because many people's lives revolved around consumerism.
I still see plenty of acts using modulars, artists are just playing them instead of posting videos of jams on social media.
There's many more options of makers and modules than ever before, I think people are just making music instead of showing off. A quite nice change if I'm honest.
Lot of broken links on that page.
Not surprising that shop links are broken, the whole point of open sourcing was that those products were getting discontinued.
I hate when companies erase any traces of legacy products from their website. But that doesn't seem to be the case here. They made a git repo containing more technical data than available before and products can still be found on their website if you open the "discontinued products" section of shop or search in support page. That's a lot better than what many consumer electronic manufacturers do.
From what I understand these were DIY kits from the beginning so schematics were always available. Gerber files and cc licensing are the main addition.