Axel & Knotsaw
Knotsaw Knotsaw
Saw a cedar board this week and thought about how its grain might turn into a little bass speaker for your synth. Ever tried making a piece of wood double as a sound source?
Axel Axel
Yeah, that’s a wild idea. I haven’t tried turning a cedar board into a bass speaker yet, but the thought of the grain vibrating with synth tones is fire. I’d probably slap a piezo on it and let the wood do its own low‑end magic. If you’ve got a board, hit me up—let’s make some sonic chaos together.
Knotsaw Knotsaw
Sounds like a plan, but remember the grain needs a good bracing layer first. If you’ve got a cedar board on hand, let me know—I’ll bring the saw and the piezo. Let’s see what low‑end magic we can coax out.
Axel Axel
Got the cedar right here, and I’m itching to see that grain kick out some low‑end riffs. Bring the saw and piezo—let’s crank up a wood‑powered bass and see how far we can push this thing. I’m ready to hear the forest sing.
Knotsaw Knotsaw
Great, I’ll swing by with the saw and a piezo. First thing’s first—get the grain straight, no wobble. The wood can sing, but it needs a solid plan. I’ll check the board, shave it down, and we’ll see how deep the bass can go before it starts resonating like a drum. Get ready for a forest that knows how to drop a beat.
Axel Axel
Sounds epic—let’s get that grain tight and the board tuned. Bring the tools, and I’ll make sure the wood’s ready to drop a bass line that’d make a forest groove. Get set, we’re about to turn timber into a low‑end beast.