MATRIXSYNTH: Monday, January 12, 2009


Monday, January 12, 2009

Nord Catalog 2008 - Clavia Still Clavia

3.8M PDF here
Note this is the 2008 catalog, not the 2009. If you haven't seen it you'll find a section on the company history and the Nord factory. Also a note on Clavia vs. Nord below.

Clavia's history starts in 1983 with their drum synths, but we of course recognize Clavia, now Nord, as the company to bring us the first virtual analog synth, the original Nord Lead. "The Nord Lead synthesizer was released in 1995. It was Clavia's first synthesizer and the first on the market to emulate analog synthesis. Thanks to its warm analog-like sound and straight forward user interface, the Nord Lead quickly became a huge success. With the Nord Lead Clavia introduced the term virtual analog, which since then has become widely accepted and synonymous with this form of synthesis."

Update: I of course couldn't help but notice the references to Clavia. If you remember, Clavia rebranded themselves to Nord Keyboards (the old http://clavia.se will redirect you to the newly branded site). There was some confusion as to whether they actually changed their name. If you look at the Catalog footnotes and the about page on Nord Keyboards you will see they are still Clavia DMI AB. Their name remains Clavia and their gear is being marketed as Nord Keyboards. It will be interesting to see what happens in time, both in the near future and years from now.

Catalog mirrored here for the archives.

Customsynth akai vx600


flickr set by customsynth
(click for more)

Be sure to see the rest of CustomSynth.

"white and blue with individual outputs via james at synth repair services"

Akai EWI USB


YouTube via audiomidicom
"audioMIDI.com's Tom Luer demos Akai's amazing new EWI USB wind controller. Free extra EWM1 mouthpiece while supplies last!"
Previous posts on the EWI USB. It was announced on November 13.

MFoS modular

via Skrog Productions on electro-music.com where you will find follow up comments and images including the Dual ADSR further below.

"Largely MFoS with Elby, CGS, Yuvsynth, Roman Sowa, BugBrand circuits. All modules up & running bar Quantizers & Gate to Trig. converters. I've populated all boards with waterwash solder for shiney long lasting component connections (hopefully Very Happy ).

It's been the simplest faults that catch me out all the time building during debugs but i'm looking forward to starting the bare ASM2 board .................. when time permits."



Synth in a tin

flickr by d_at
(click for more)

full size

"I built a two oscillator synth and put it in an Altoids tin."

Purga Mystery Solved

see the update to this post.

Update: the synth built for sale was not actually the Purga, but the other listed in the previous post.

Homemade Synthesizer Part 2


YouTube via traxxboy.
"Here is how it sounds sorry about the low quality video"

Synopsis Software Editors

DSI Mopho editor 1.00 (free)(2009.01.11.)
"features - sound editor, sound organizer, restrictioned sound randomizer, sound morpher & arp randomizer with scale and more ..."

Waldorf Blofeld editor 1.04d (free)(2008.12.30.)
"features - multi mode editor, organizer, sound randomizer, sound morpher & arp randomizer and more ..."

Previously posted videos here.

via Synop in the comment of this post.

Top two shots are the MoPho editor, bottom two the Blofeld.

Update: note the MoPho does come with a free editor already. Thanks to Mibrilane in the comments for the reminder.

The Continuum at NAMM

via Mark on AH: "Lippold Haken, Ed Eagan, Skot Wiedmann, and I will be demonstrating the Haken Continuum Fingerboard and a lot of other cool stuff at the NAMM music trade show in Anaheim, California this week (Jan 15-18). If you happen to be going to the show, come by and visit us at booth 1803.

More info:
Continuum Fingerboard
Lippold Haken
Ed Eagan
Skot Wiedmann
The NAMM Show

Remember to click on the NAMM label below for all posts related to NAMM. Also note it will bring up all NAMM posts including last summer, winter and so on, so be sure to look at the dates of the posts for what's current.

MFOS 16 Step Analog Sequencer ( DIY Project )


YouTube via Thalassa77
"http://switchedonsynthesizer.blogspot...

DIY project from "Music From Outer Space( MFOS)"

16 step analog sequencer designed by Ray Wilson

I expend the last two months building this project. It's almost finished, only cosmetic things left but it's totally functional.

The main features of this sequencer are :
- 16 steps
- Every Step has Gate On/off
- Coarse and Fine tune pots for programming
- Internal clock with variable rate
- Clock Out
- Synced start with external signal
- Clock in ( work slaved to external clock )
- Voltage out with or without portamento and simultaneous available

More info of this project here :
http://www.musicfromouterspace.com/an..."

x0xWASP 2 - 360°


YouTube via BIM0X
"A look at 360° of the x0xWASP 2, a self sourced x0xb0x. Notice the ultra flat panel, thanks to adapted spacers, custom painted buttons, and flat LED ;) Chromed jack at the back and logo designed is cool too. No stickers, just paint (sérigraphie)"

Tutorial: Making analog kicks and snare on Electribe ER1


YouTube via muzik4machines
"at least the LFO on the ER1 is fast enough to make a snare from a sine damn imovie HD sucks at exporting to get stereo sound/ widescreen embeds use &fmt=22 at the end of the URL"

MAM ADX-1

via this auction

"presenting the MAM adx-1. A rare little beastie. Here presented in mint condition and in the ultra rare metalic silver - think tb303 with a bit of sparkle... 100% ANALOGUE - thats right the hats, the clap - everything. It has LFO's to modulate the sounds giving you those classic subtle filter sweeps on the snare or getting some crazy SFX going by modulating the pitch!!"

EMS Synthi

via this auction
"See photos for modifications as below and what I believe to be their purpose...
1) OSCILLATOR 2 SYNC with OSC1/OSC3 or OFF
2) OSCILLATOR 3 SYNC with OSC1/OSC2 or OFF
3) OSCILLATOR 3 FREQUENCY HI/LOW switch
4) SYNC DEPTH (Threshold) Pot/control
5) VCW2 (not sure about this)
6) Envelope Invert jumper/pin
7) GATE INPUT (was CH2 Control Signal In)"





Roland Jupiter-6

via this auction


NAMM: Blofeld - Beast, Yes. Wii Support, No

follow-up to this post
Pictures taken by three crazy Waldorf betatesters: Dr. Georg Müller, Till "keep on turning these knobs" Kopper and Boele "SCD" Gerkes.

http://www.waldorfmusic.de
Note: Waldorf stated that they have NO part in this and may consider looking out for more sane beta-testers... :)

Untitled - born4trance (AXS)


YouTube via born4trance
"Hello ppl!

Here's an old(er) track i once made using AXS v2.03 (a dutch product from/by Resolution Audio Software: www.resolutionaudio.nl), for MS-DOS/Win9x, which was later released for free
(you can still access the website and download the program and extras)

AXS was a combination of an analogue synthesizer, a sampler, effect unit and sequencer.

The analogue synthesizer:
Provides a complete virtual analogue synthesizer with 7 parts. Each part can be set up to play a different sound, so 7 synthesizer sounds can be playing at one time.

The Sampler:
Lets you play back percussion samples and sound effects. Samples can be filtered and sent through the effect unit. Up to 128 different samples can be loaded. The sampler and the synthesizer share a maximum of 64 notes which can be played at one time.

The Effect unit:
Provides stereo-delay and reverb effects. These effects enhance the sound and stereo image.

The Sequencer:
Is used to control the synthesizer, sampler and effect unit.

The technical specifications of the program:

Supported Platforms
MS-DOS/Windows 95

System Requirements
Video: VESA 2.0 videocard with Linear Frame Buffer
Memory: 4 MB
Processor: 486DX or better, Pentium 200 advised

Supported Soundcards
SoundBlaster 16 compatibles
Gravis Ultrasound Classic, Max or PnP
Terratec Maestro/EWS64
Any card with Windows Sound System (WSS)
Any card with AD1848/CS4248 CODEC

Tone Generation Method
Virtual Analog Subtractive Synthesis

Maximum Simultaneous Polyphony
64-note (first-note priority)

Multitimbral Capacity
8-part (Synth: 7 + Sample:1)

Presets
128 user presets

Samples
128 user samples

Sample Memory
Only limited by available PC memory

Maximum Sample Length
16 MB

Effects
Distortion, Reverb/Delay

Sequencer
Tracks: 16
Tempo: 32..255 BPM
Resolution: 24 ticks per quarter note.

Enjoy my track! :)"

Star Traveller - born4trance (AXS)

Text ColorUpdate: more vids

No title again - born4trance (AXS)

NAMM: Pacarana—Supercomputer for Sound

The Symbolic Sound Pacarana is here.
"Most powerful sound design workstation on the planet
That’s what Electronic Musician magazine calls the Kyma sound design environment. Future Music calls it the Holy Grail of sound design. Kyma's strength arises from its unique set of algorithms, the ease with which you can create endless combinations of those algorithms, and the unprecedented degree of real-time responsive control over the sound parameters.

You’ve already heard the sounds of Kyma in films like WALL•E, The Dark Knight, Master and Commander, Finding Nemo. And you've heard the interactive musical sounds of Kyma both on albums and in live sets by legendary musicians and producers like John Paul Jones, A.R. Rahman, Rich Costey, BT, and many others.

In 1990, Symbolic Sound revolutionized the sound design and music software industry with the introduction of Kyma, a graphical modular software sound design environment accelerated by the software-reconfigurable Capybara multi-processor sound computation engine. Symbolic Sound is committed to bringing the most advanced and flexible sound design technology to sound designers, musicians, educators, researchers, and creative professionals through its innovative hardware and software offerings.

What comes next?

A supercomputer designed for sound"

The flagship model Pacarana is 150% the power of a fully-loaded Capybara-320 for less than half the price. The entry-level Paca costs less than a Basic Capybara-320, but the new entry-level model is 5 times more powerful.

Falling in love with Kyma
What is it that people love about Kyma? For some people it’s having an unbounded environment for creating sounds that have never been heard before. Others cite outstanding technical support and the super-stability and reliability of the Kyma software during live performances. Still others rave about the continuous stream of free software updates full of new features and synthesis/processing algorithms. And everyone loves the legendary Kyma sound.

What’s the secret behind the ‘Kyma sound’? The secret is in the software. When you have a supercomputer dedicated entirely to capturing, processing, and synthesizing sound, you have the luxury of being able to do things right. We don’t cut corners, and you can hear the difference."


"On the back of the Pacarana—all the high-speed connectivity you want and need for digital audio production: two FireWire 800 ports, 2 USB ports, 100-base T Ethernet jack, and more…

A DC power plug connects the Pacarana to an external power supply that auto-senses voltage and frequency of the AC power source no matter where in the world you travel.

The Pacarana communicates with the Kyma X software running under Mac OS or Windows via FireWire 800 (IEEE1394B) or an 800-to-400 adapter cable.

Audio and MIDI input and output is handled via an external FireWire or USB converter or, for current Kyma owners, through a Capybara-320 with Flame FireWire I/O. Connect additional USB MIDI controllers like keyboards or fader boxes via the second USB port."

The above is just an excerpt. You can find more on the Symbolic Sound Pacarana website.

Update: the official press release came in at 4:33 PM:
"New Supercomputer for Sound:
Pacarana for Kyma Sound Design Environment

Champaign IL, January 12, 2009:
Musicians and sound designers for film, games and live electronic music now have a new supercomputer designed specifically for interactive sound exploration and live performance. The Pacarana and Paca are two new multiprocessor computers optimized for capturing, processing and synthesizing sound for the award-winning Kyma Sound Design Environment. Designed by Symbolic Sound Corporation to serve as a smaller, more affordable and more powerful replacement for the Capybara*320 sound computation engine, the new entry-level system is 5 times more powerful and costs $500 less than the older entry-level configuration. The power of the higher-end model exceeds that of a fully-loaded Capybara*320 but costs far less than half as much.

http://ssc-media.com/Pictures/Pacarana/Front%20(full%20res).JPG

http://ssc-media.com/Pictures/Pacarana/Nick%20Paca%20trimmed.jpg

Kyma, the Paca(rana), and backwards compatibility
Favored by sound designers for its unique set of algorithms, the ease with which one can create endless combinations of sound processing and synthesis algorithms, its reliability during live performances, and the responsiveness of real-time control over sound parameters, the Kyma sound design environment benefits from the new Paca(rana) platforms in the form of more polyphony, denser textures, faster loading times, more memory for live sampling and playback, enhanced portability, refinements in sound quality and the potential for future developments.

According to composer/performer and early adopter Phil Curtis of SoNu (http://www.sonusound.com):
I'm loving the new Pacarana. [M]ost of my old sounds just barely register on the meter, even sounds that just barely worked on the Capybara....I can already see that this is going to be a big leap in what I can do and paves the way for years of further development.

Sound designers who have been using Kyma X on the Capybara*320 can open and continue working on their current projects using the new hardware. Switching back and forth between the Capybara and the new hardware is completely transparent, and Symbolic Sound will continue to support Kyma X on the Capybara-320. Kyma users also have the option of keeping their Capybara*320 computer running alongside a new Pacarana, augmenting, rather than replacing, their current hardware.

Smaller, lighter, easily portable
With more sound designers going freelance, more musicians going on tour, and the airlines charging for each checked bag, Symbolic Sound decided to make the Pacarana and Paca small and light enough to fit into a backpack, laptop case or in a small rolling rack. The Pacarana footprint is the same as that of a MacBook Pro 15" (the Paca is about 3 inches shorter) and is 1 rack unit in height: ideal for live performances, working on the road, transporting from home studio to sound stage or from work to home.

Connectivity
On the back of the Paca(rana) are 2 USB ports, 2 FireWire 800 ports, and a DC power plug that connects to an external power supply brick (about the same size as the Mac Mini's power brick).
http://www.ssc-media.com/Pictures/Pacarana/Back%20(full%20res).JPG

The Paca and Pacarana communicate with the Kyma X software running under Mac OS or Windows via FireWire 800 (IEEE 1394B) or FireWire 400 (IEEE 1394A) using an 800-to-400 adapter cable.

Audio and MIDI input and output is handled by an external FireWire or USB converter or, for current Kyma owners, through a Capybara-320 with Flame FireWire I/O.

Additional USB MIDI controllers like keyboards or fader boxes can be connected via the second USB port.

More Audio and MIDI Input/Output options
Symbolic Sound decided to decouple the sound conversion from the sound computation functions in order to give customers more options for customizing their studio and mobile setups. Customers can now select from among a full range of high-quality third-party 1394TA AMDTP-standard FireWire and class-compliant USB audio converter devices available in nearly every size and price range. The growing list of qualified third-party converters includes the TC Electronic Konnekt series, the MOTU UltraLite-mk3, the Apogee Duet, and, on the USB side, the M-Audio Fast Track Pro and Logitech and Sennheiser USB headsets.

The Kyma Sound
Early reports from alpha and beta testers confirm that the sound quality of the Pacarana matches and, in some cases, surpasses that of its predecessor.

"People tell me that Kyma has an excellent word-of-mouth reputation for audio quality, and they usually attribute the quality to the Capybara*320 converters," says company president Carla Scaletti. "While it's true that the Capybara converters are excellent, the real secret to high-quality audio is in the algorithms. When you have a computer entirely dedicated to computing sound, you don't have to cut corners; we don't have to share our sound computer with a CPU-hungry operating system or a graphics subsystem; all Paca and Pacarana cycles are dedicated to computing high quality sound."

Live Control
You can use any USB or FireWire MIDI device or software for controlling sound parameters on the Paca(rana). Symbolic Sound has been working closely with Haken Audio (http://www.hakenaudio.com) to create seamless plug-and-play operation with the new MIDI-based Continuum fingerboard. Additional controllers with a high degree of Kyma integration include the Wacom tablet, the MotorMix, and the controllers supported by Camille Troillard's OSCulator (http://www.osculator.net) software, including the Nintendo Wiimote, the Jazz Mutant Lemur, the Logitech Space Navigator, and others.

Backpacking
The Paca(rana) fits perfectly into the hard-shell laptop sleeves made by Tom Bihn (http://www.tombihn.com) and Symbolic Sound is making the Tom Bihn Brain Cell sleeve and Brain Bag backpack available with the purchase of a Paca or Pacarana for hands-free transport of your laptop, Pacarana and other mobile audio gear.

Price and availability
Symbolic Sound is now shipping both the Paca and the Pacarana. The entry-level Paca is available for US $2970 and the professional studio model Pacarana is available for US $4402. To place an order, please visit http://www.symbolicsound.com or send email to info-kyma@symbolicsound.com

Summary
A lower entry-level price, a smaller footprint, and a whole lot of extra horsepower make Kyma X + Paca(rana) a supercomputer for sound designers and musicians!

Background
Symbolic Sound first revolutionized the sound design and music software industry in 1990 with the introduction of Kyma, a graphical modular software sound design environment accelerated by the software-reconfigurable Capybara multi-processor sound computation engine. The Paca(rana) is the fifth in a series of increasingly powerful sound computation engines designed and produced by Symbolic Sound to work in conjunction with the Kyma sound design environment (now in its sixth major release, not counting the hundreds of free updates between each major release). Symbolic Sound is committed to bringing the most advanced and flexible sound design technology to sound designers, musicians, educators, researchers, game developers, and other creative professionals through its innovative hardware and software offerings.

Symbolic Sound, the Symbolic Sound logo, Kyma, Pacarana, Paca, and Capybara and their logos are trademarks of Symbolic Sound Corporation. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners."

Sonic LAB Korg nanoKONTROL Review


YouTube via sonicstate
"We take a look at the Korg nanoKONTROL, one of three mini USB controllers. For more stuff www.sonicstate.com"

Moog Cake

via Marko

"The cake is a birthday present for lead singer Kristina from The Sweeps"

cs80 galaxiesmerge2


YouTube via galaxiesmerge
"Poly Pressure, Poly Velocity and expression pedal Arpeggio sequence. Fat thick Brass sounds. Deep sweeping Funky crazy sounds. Thanks to ingsoc_1979 for some comments and discussion - so the classic brass is for you! Next time I'll do PWM Strings. Very wide range of tonal modulation in this video. Please let me know what you think! Let me know if you want a CS80 "Tour" - I plan a sound-effects video next with tips and tricks in maxing out the CS80 value and it capabilities. Maybe too much reverb on this video! Any reactions are welcome."

011109 (sin Echo)


YouTube via dkimcg
"Lots of M15 FMing, Triple Timer as a gate for cycling M10s, M12 bandpass mode with Lots of modulations. There's two parts since I forgot to record anything with the RS390 Echo in this go around. Love the Triple Timer the more I use it...

That's without echo in Spanish in case you were wondering where the evil echo was."

011109 (con Echo)

"Same patch as 011109a, but takes off where that leaves off plus delay. I forgot to experiment with the delay while recording the first part of the video.

No con game in this echo. The RS-390 is digital, but it sounds great with no noticeable artifacts. :)"

Roland RS-09


YouTube via KM65536. "Organ/Strings Keyboard."

The Korg MS-20: The Patch Panel 1


YouTube via AutomaticGainsay
"Here is part one of a demonstration of the sound and functionality of various implementations of the semi-modular patch panel of the Korg MS-20."

Test Doepfer A-100


YouTube via yukimizake

Gem S2


YouTube via majorhostage
"Aftertouch and response of the mighty Gem S2"
Listen closely to the aftertouch. I'm hearing the higher notes react but not the lower. Anyone know if the G2 actually had polyphonic aftertouch? I guess the patch could have key tracking on the filter enough to not hear the effect.
Update via jupiter8 in the comments: "The GEM S2/S3 does indeed have polyphonic aftertouch"
Update via jupiter8 in the comments: "I found this databse. I edited it somewhat and added a few missing models. I believe there's an Ensoniq model missing and there seems to be some confusion about the Prophet T8 and Yamaha DX1.
Other than that i believe it's complete.

I've heard claims that both only offer internal PolyAT and does'nt transmit it over midi. I've also heard the contrary so i'm not sure what is what. I don't have either synth unfortunately so i can't tell."

Weird Sound Generator And cigar box amp


YouTube via mforcemultiplier. via this auction
"DIY WSG from Ray Wilson www.musicfromouterspace.com"

Randgrid, The coolest music app for iPhone and iPod touch ever!


YouTube via antephon
"I just got my hands on this amazing techno app Randgrid for my iphone, I create really cool acid music riding the bus. it isn't officially released yet, but it will be in a near future."
You can get Randgrid here:
Randgrid

DIY Synths - Purga

Two images spotted by Deviant Synth. If anyone knows more about these, feel free to comment or contact me - my contact info is on the bottom right of the site.


Update: ::vtol:: wrote in to inform us that the synth above was made in Russia a couple of years ago. "The builder made some @for sale@ posts in russian forums, thr price was - 1000$ but no one want to but that for about 4 mouths..." You can find both images including more DIY here.
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