MATRIXSYNTH: Oberheim Xpander programming


Friday, November 09, 2007

Oberheim Xpander programming


YouTube via 123synthland.
"As vintage synth dealers, we get to play with a lot of fun toys, but you already know this... I love the Oberheim Xpander! Here's me programming a patch or 2 on the next Xpander we plan to sell. I started out with Oberheim's initialized patch. Though the Xpander isn't as tweak friendly as an analog synth with 1 fader for every parameter, it's still an amazing and deep tool that can be programmed pretty quickly once you're familiar with the layout. Enjoy, and email me anytime at minime123@onebox.com"

8 comments:

  1. This one is on my some day when I win the lottery list.

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  2. Is this in the comedy category?

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  3. Great synths. Kind of "uncool" to some, but fabulous sounding without the excessive price tags of some polysynths..

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  4. He's wearing gloves and piggy, I hope so.

    On one of the synths I can never hope to won until I have a mid life crisis and I spend the autumn of my years wiping it down with a diaper in the garage,

    LAY OFF THE THING!! YOURE GONNA BREAK IT IF YOU DONT STOP MANHANDLING THE KNOBS!!

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  5. Great synth. Terrible video.

    Hitting switches and spinning knobs like this isn't good programming. By all means have fun with the Xpander, but slow down. If you want to demo it, select a patch or two and play something extended, or tweak a patch slowly and show the control panel and flashing lights up close.

    I love the Xpander, though. It's like a multitimbral analog modular, with presets.

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  6. in his next vid he'll skip to the more efficient method of just rubbing the print around the knobs off with a pencil eraser.

    i am submitting him to guiness for loudest knob turning. was the synth even on?

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  7. via minimime123 aka 123synthland:

    "-i remember one time when my mother took her car in to the mechanic's. she handed him the keys so he could take it for a test drive. she almost had a heart attack when he floored it, cause that car had never gone that fast with her at the wheel. she didnt understand what he was doing, and had a similar reaction to some people here. i knew EXACTLY what he was doing - you generally find more problems when you push a machine. so...

    -im intentionally a bit rough with pots and buttons when i test items that are going up for sale because i want to be sure everythings in proper working order and is going to perform well for whoever buys it, whether they have a gentle touch, or a "not-so-gentle" touch. xpander encoders, which are known to go bad (and are also designed to click loudly, as you can hear), can respond differently at different speeds, so i test them both slowly and quickly. i didnt want to bore you guys to death with a slow version cause i cant stand sitting there for 10 minutes watching something that could have been accomplished in 2, and i wouldnt want to put you through such torture either. :) plus, my camera stops recording videos after around 3 minutes. also, before i bought my 1st xpander, i thought it was going to be relatively slow to program without a knob for every feature and i wanted to show people thats not the case if you know your way around it. i actually made a few bad button pushes there because i was trying to move quicker than usual.

    -i have owned and used more than 1 xpander heavily for the last 15 years and havent had a single problem or gotten a single scratch on them since ive had them. plus, im not as "rough" with them in the studio. so, to those who are concerned that im abusing this (or any other) synth, dont be cause im not. you guys might be used to decrepit old crap that falls apart when you look at it, but the stuff we sell is usually much better off, because we put it to the test and fix any functional issues we try our hardest to discover.

    -as for rubbing off any print, oberheim already took care of that. theres actually a layer of material (im not sure what it is - translucent plastic?) above all the graphics. though this material itself doesnt look very good scratched up.

    -anyway, thanks for the concern. we would never do anything to harm any synths. in fact, we have turned down guaranteed sales because we didnt like the buyers plans for our babies (heavy road use of a pristine instrument, an "art project" where the instrument would essentially be put to death, etc). so relax, people! :)"

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To reduce spam, comments for posts older than one week are not displayed until approved, usually same day. Do not insult people. For items for sale, do not ask if it is still available. Check the auction link and search for the item. Auctions are from various sellers and expire over time. Posts remain for the pics and historical purposes. This site is meant to be a daily snapshot of some of what was out there in the world of synths.

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