MATRIXSYNTH: 9090


Showing posts with label 9090. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 9090. Show all posts

Friday, November 22, 2013

9090 Analogue Drum Synth SN 001 by Trevor Page - Roland TR-909 Based Rack

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"This unit is in excellent condition all around. An original build by the designer of this Roland TR-909 based drum synth, Trevor Page, which he signed. 120V unit.

You can find more info on his website here.

It's not an easy build and truly rare to find and assembled unit for sale.

Pair this up with a MIDI drum machine or sequencer and your good to go for authentic 909 sounds."

Saturday, May 25, 2013

TR909 clone and TB303


Published on May 25, 2013 pifgadget23·4 videos

"Premier test de mon clone de TR909 (introspectiv9090) avec une TB303. Aucun traitement sonore, il y a juste la TB avec une distortion au cul. Ceci est une démo technique.
First test of my TR909 clone accompanied by a TB303. This is a technical demonstration.
No FX, no compressor. Only the 303 has a distortion"

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Meandering - The Infinite Melody


Published on May 15, 2013 otherunicorn·43 videos

"A mostly self playing patch done in analog.
Melody played by a CGS32 Infinite melody through a quantizer, - Zeroscillator, - Sawtooth Animator - Quad Bandpass filter - CGS765 Tube VCA.
Three counterpoints are all Roland System 100M 110 voice modules.
Sequencer and timing - Best of CGS Swamp.
Drums - 9090 driven by a gate to midi converter. (only midi in the whole patch)
Change of base pitch - old dude using digital-control, i.e. my finger.
Recorded on a GoPro Hero 2 plugged into the mixer's headphone socket, thus the noise level."

Saturday, June 02, 2012

TR 9090 (Roland TR-909)


YouTube Published on May 13, 2012 by KickSenior

"Kick.S"

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

9090 - Build Your Own Roland TR-909 Rack Clone

via this auction
"An Electronics Project With A Difference. Build Your Own tr-909!

If you've ever wished for the warmth and flexibility of an original analogue drum machine like the TR-909 and you're also handy with a soldering iron, then a real alternative could be to put one together yourself. The 9090 project starter kit contains what you need to get started. This is a project suited for more experienced electronics enthusiasts and requires a small number of obsolete components.

The 9090 Project is an authentic sounding, rack-mounted, MIDI controlled copy of the TR-909, that you build yourself. The starter kit being offered for sale in this listing contains the bare printed circuit boards and a small number of special components. The majority of the electronic components are to be obtained separately from your own preferred electronic components supplier.

"The advantage of using these boards is that the hard work has already been done: well thought-out, compact and extensively tested board layout design makes them an absolute pleasure to build, and the end result looks fantastic. These PCBs contain zero errors, therefore fitting all of the components and doing all of the wiring correctly can often result in something that works pretty much straight away."

Features

□ Includes all analogue sound circuits from the original machine, and it sounds identical. Even better, in fact - because some of the sounds have more flexibility. The Bass Drum, for example, has a number of new additional control knobs that enable it to make a fantastic range of kicks. Take a listen to the Sound Samples on the right (mp3 format).

□ It does not have a sequencer of any form, but it has an excellent full MIDI interface. The PIC microcontroller that comes supplied with the boards is pre-programmed with embedded software that forms the heart of the MIDI interface (decodes the MIDI messages and translates them to trigger and velocity signals for each drum circuit). The drum sounds are velocity sensitive. How the drum sounds are mapped across the keyboard scale can be reconfigured via System Exclusive messages. LED indicates MIDI activity.

□ A 'bonus feature' is a Sync24 output, which enables you to sync something like a TB303 or MC202 to the MIDI clock via the 9090.

□ The boards are intended to be built into a 19” rack enclosure or a sloping-top box (or whatever you choose) to form a MIDI controlled 909 clone. It's entirely your call on what shape and size yours is going to be! You can also choose to only build some of the drum circuits if you don't need all of the drum sounds.

I kept most of the sound circuits pretty much as they were in their original form, and the project includes all of the sounds found on the original machine. Some of the sounds have been enhanced to expand their capability far beyond those in the original machine, the Bass Drum being a good example: it now has seven potentiometers instead of four, and sounds absolutely awesome. I think many people built their 9090s just for this sound alone. Some original components that have become long obsolete have been replaced by easily obtainable substitutes, without affecting the timbre of the drum sound in any way.

All of the sound circuits are built onto the two main large boards that are seen in the picture. The third long, narrow board is used to mount the rear output sockets onto (featuring individual and stereo summary outputs). I used two main boards instead of one because it means that you can stack the two boards if you want to build the project into a relatively small enclosure, and they’re just easier to work with. The boards also contain the MIDI interface, output mix amplifier, power regulation circuitry and even a handy DIN Sync output so that you can use the 9090 to synchronise your TB303 or MC202 to MIDI clock. The completed boards just need potentiometers and output sockets wired to them, power supply and MIDI input, and away you go – a fantastic analogue drum machine you built yourself."

Samples, manuals and more: http://www.introspectiv.eclipse.co.uk/
Also see the 9090 label below for all posts here.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

9090 Analog Drum Synthesizer

Update via joseph_amos in the comments: "This is actually a DIY project. [link] It looks like whoever is selling just copied and pasted the text from the first page. "

images via this auction
"serial No. 001 t page 2002
The 9090 is an analogue drum machine based upon the legendary Roland TR-909 Rhythm Composer. Many people consider this machine to be the life and soul of house music and it's modern derivatives. Trance, techno, whatever. In some moment of insanity back in '99 I decided it would be a fun challenge to build an entire clone of this classic analogue drum box (having no appreciation of how such a project can take over your life) and, bored with using sampled beats, I wanted a real, tweakable analogue box. Just like the 909.

I chose to make my 9090 just a MIDI controlled unit without an integral sequencer. All original drums are in there, together with power supply and a new PIC-based MIDI interface. The complete project is built across two separate printed circuit boards, designed to fit within a 2U height 19" rack enclosure. I didn't develop a sequencer to go with this, but I'll do it if I get the time.

The voice circuits used within the clone remain faithful to those of the original machine. In other words they remain mostly unchanged, except where I've added controls for extra tweakage. Most semiconductors have been substituted for modern equivalents that are more easily available. Most of the TR-909 sounds are completely analogue and hence some pretty intricate discrete circuitry is involved. Only the hi-hat and cymbal are 'digital' since the TR-909 used samples contained within three 32K ROMs for these.

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