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Average Price: $316
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$150
$601+
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Based on price data from 2 merchants for "Old Blood Noise Endeavors Parting". Prices shown reflect NEW condition. Tracking began Apr 2, 2026.
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Description
The Parting Lo-Fi Ambient Textured Glitchy Reverb & Delay by Old Blood Noise Endeavors
Parting is a box of pleasant surprises. Moments of chance will give bursts of a glitch delay that can smear into a reverb, modulated by tremolo or vibrato, filtered, and, most importantly, dissolved into lofi aliasing or stretched out reverse. All of this may jump around in halves and octaves of itself - it’s up to you and Parting, together.
Controls
Dissolve has two functions. Below noon, it reduces sample rate, creating an increasingly degraded version of the signal. Above noon, it reverses the signal, and repeatedly cuts the reverse clock in half as the knob is turned, creating an increasingly long and degraded reverse.
Rate sets the rate of the modulation LFO, which is also the frequency of triggers for moments of chance.
Depth sets the depth of the LFO.
Shape sets the LFO shape: Sine, Square, Reverse Saw, Saw, Random Sine, Random Square, Envelope
Chance allows random bits of signal to enter the delay/reverb buffer during an LFO cycle.
Smear adds diffusion and feedback to the delay lines, turning them into a lush reverb as the knob is turned up.
Glitch creates various clock subdivisions.
Time sets the timing of the delay/reverb, as well as the reverse.
Filter sets the cutoff point of the post-dissolve filter.
Mix sets the blend of dry and wet signal.
Aux switch for tap tempo, half speed, or preset switching.
Soft-touch On/Off footswitch with relay switching for minimal switch noise
these could be cool too.
Product specs
| Effects | delay, octave, reverb, tremolo, vibrato, wah |
| Power | 9V |
| Bypass | true bypass, buffered bypass |
| Analog/Digital | digital |
Videos
Harp Lady
Old Blood Noise x Emily Hopkins - Parting
Reviews
4.0 out of 5
Based on 1 Review and 2 Ratings
adding just a couple of alt controls could make it a gem
so, played with this thing for a while. what I liked: 1) the expressionramperesque lfo ranges. It can go very, very slow (the number we have in the ramper's manual is "approximately .0013Hz" for a cycle). if you know, you know. 2) random vibrato. 3) the fact that there's an option to make its tremolo work for both channels in sync without panning. coupled with the slow LFO it gives interesting options for background ambiences showing and hiding them for a while. at least, it could (see below). CONS or what I didn't quite like: 1) the biggest bummer that makes me think if it's a keeper of not: the chance knob is hard-tied to the LFO speed without subdivision/multiplier options. What I mean: if you do want to use slow modulations (slow random vibrato or a slow trem like in the example above) once the algorithm decides to let your signal into the delay line, it can be there for minutes, because it erases (or decides to stay) each LFO cycle. And this makes slow mods practically unusable. I assume, very fast rates won't quite do either: for example, if you want a very fast trem while having the delay thing to stay for a while, most likely it will be erased very soon. The delay time subdivisions alter the delay time, but not how the chance work. 2) the second is crucial too: no way to untie the glitch knob from the LFO speed, it always messes with the LFO. I mean, yeah, doubling the trem speed occasionally could be cool, but when you can't control it this could be undesirable – if you want a steady modulation with a glitchy delay speed, it's not possible. Example: when I use vibrato I prefer pretty high depth which sounds cool and not obvious at low rates, but when it changes the speed it gets seasick. Or it could be a side-chain-like pump made with a reversed saw trem which should be rhythmic, steady and entrancing, but, well... Allowing to decide if the glitch just pitchshifts or not could definitely find its uses. And when it does change the rate it could nice to let user decide to what subdiv/multiplier according to whatever speed: like, doubling it for the octave ups seem logical, but the contrasts work well too, so slowing down a trem + octaves up could musically work too, no need to lock the player in the cliches. 3) below noon chance sets a chance for an old or a new signal to slip into the delay line, always 50-50. maybe an alt control for the 50-50 thing could be musically useful too, who knows. 4) LPF and HPF don't work simultaneously which could be helpful for a tighter control in the mix. But even without that, the unit could seriously benefit from binding filters' settings to speeds, because octave ups are always seem too harsh and ear pearcing – I'd really love to apply a specific LPF setting just to tame that, or to add even more glitchy feel. ALL IN ALL: it seems like just adding a couple of alt functions could make it way more usable in scenarios where you want it to behave in some specific musical manner, but without the LFO-related options (on/off/subdivs/multipliers) the usage narrows down to a glitchy machine that works in a pre-programmed way, so it will sound basically the same in every setup. 3 stars is not particularly "bad", but the mod side of it doesn't allow a player to freely and creatively use the glitch side and vice versa. No new sounds needed, just more control.
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Add recommendation1 alternative for Old Blood Noise Endeavors Parting, curated by the Equipboard community.
$459.00
Costs more, but in addition to glitches you get a lot more options. Also has a vibrato, reverse and a reverb plus: granular stuff, arp, semi-regular delays and a one minute stereo looper. The glitch algorithm can be set to kill dry (maxed mix), so your incoming signal can be automatically turned off when the glitch randomly turns on. In many cases when you really want the glitching algo this is the way you would want it to behave. Parting's strong side is its modulation which is unfortunately tied too tight to the glitch (no separate subdivisions) and a high-pass filter (only LPF in Microcosm).
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