This is kind of a hack but it works - DaisySP as a Teensy audio object. DaisySP is mostly code ported from other projects - Csound, Soundpipe, Mutable Instruments eurorack modules etc. There is a lot of neat audio processing stuff in there that the Teensy Audio library does not have.
Editorial:
My intent is not to somehow rip off Electrosmith and undermine their Daisy product. Very little of the DaisySP code originates from Electrosmith - its open source and its fair game. I have purchased stuff from them and I encourage others to do so. The Daisy is a nice product line and it offers features that Teensy doesn't have but I prefer coding with Arduino and the extensive libraries that ecosystem provides. You will need a Teensy 4.x for this because it chews up memory and CPU pretty fast. Or buy a Daisy if that floats your boat.
each voice has:
4 polyblep sawtooth oscillators
1 moog ladder filter
1 envelope generator which controls voice amplitude and filter frequency
plus mono reverb at the end of the chain. Total of 64 antialiased oscillators, 16 filters, 16 envelope generators, 1 reverb and 1 LFO (LFO not used as yet). It uses 69% of a Teensy 4.x CPU at 811Mhz.
DaisySP uses all floating point math - samples are converted to 16 bit integer before they are passed on to the Teensy Audio library for output to the audio shield.
Thanks for pointing that out. The compiler keeps it straight but it is confusing to a reader. I just pushed changes to the example sketches.
Its trivial to set up the Teensy Audio library for DaisySP so you don't really need the Audio designer. DaisySP does almost everything the Audio library does plus a lot more. I like the simpler programming model of DaisySP.