MATRIXSYNTH: Matrixsynth


Showing posts with label Matrixsynth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matrixsynth. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Silk for iPad

Mat from microscopics wrote in letting me know about a new iPad app he has just released. It's not a synth, but rather a drawing app with synth generated ambient music in the background, and a wind chime effect while drawing. "The soundtrack and all sounds were made on the Arp Odyssey and Jupiter 6." You might remember the name Microscopics from various synth posts featured on this site as well as Osmos.


Silk  - Yuri Vishnevsky - iTunes

"With the swish of a finger, anyone can create beautiful, flowing art. An ethereal, relaxing soundscape brings you into a world where strands of color spring from your fingertips.

Silk strands mingle and fuse, weaving together into works of art.

Features:
- The official app of weavesilk.com, with millions of users.
- Create gorgeous wallpapers with the swish of a finger.
- Original music and sound composed for the Silk experience."

The top two pics are mine and the bottom two are from iTunes. Obviously, I tried creating a green M for MATRIXSYNTH. In the second shot I just added a line under the M and there it was - the MATRIXSYNTH M synth cat silhouette was born. :)

Silk  - Yuri Vishnevsky - iTunes
iPads on eBay


Sunday, May 15, 2011

ADDAC System Added to Manufacturers Page

Check out http://addacsystem.org/ for what they have to offer. Remember, to check out the Manufacturers page now and then. You can find the link at the bottom of the MANUFACTURERS section on the right. These are the makers that visit the site and support our community. If you are a manufacturer and not on the page, feel free to shoot me an email with a 250px x 100px ad and I'll add you.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

M-Audio Venom Review and Interview with Product Manager Taiho Yamada


A quick note: This review is long. You can jump to sections that interest you vs. reading it straight through if you prefer. This review focuses primarily on the synth engine for one single patch on the Venom. The Venom supports Multi mode with up to four multitimbral parts. Not only can you layer sound programs but you can set global parameters for the set. Be sure to see the Multi mode section of "Tips and Tricks via Taiho Yamada" at the end of this post. Taiho is the Lead Project Manager of the Venom and served as my contact during the review. I want to thank Taiho for his help and enthusiastic generosity. He is a true synthesist and the Venom is his baby.

Synth connections: Taiho previously worked at Alesis on the Andromeda A6. The DSP developer of the Venom worked on Radikal Technologies' Spectralis and the Accelerator. People that contributed to the presets via sound design include Richard Devine, Francis Preve, Mark Ovenden (Avid's AIR Instruments, ProTools VIs), Joerg Huettner (Waldorf, Access, Alesis), and of course Taiho Yamada.

*Don't miss the "Q&A with Taiho" section towards the end of the review. Also keep an eye out for "Taiho's Tips and Tricks" throughout the review in grey. You can find the consolidated list below the Q&A section.

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

A Quick Note on MATRIXSYNTH-C

MATRIXSYNTH-C started as a place to showcase music made by you the readers of the site. The rule for the site is that only music sent in goes up. This rewards you in that your posts stay up longer vs. competing with the flux of posts going up here on MATRIXSYNTH. It also keeps posts here under control. If you are unclear as to what goes up there vs. here, see this post. In short, MATRIXSYNTH is about the gear and MATRIXSYNTH-C is about the music.

That said, a concern of course is that people that have no interest in the sites (promoters and marketers) might drown your posts on C. So... Moving forward there is a new rule for MATRIXSYNTH-C. If you want a post to go up and promote your music, you will need to promote MATRIXSYNTH by linking back to the site. If you send something in for a post, please make sure there is a link back to MATRIXSYNTH before sending. If not it will likely be ignored. People that take the time to promote MATRIXSYNTH will be rewarded by having their posts stay up on MATRIXSYNTH-C longer. Note all MATRIXSYNTH-C posts also go up on MATRIXSYNTH Twitter and MATRIXSYNTH Facebook.

Update: I will make the exception for people that contribute to the main site. Unless I "know" you please call out what you have contributed - so much comes in it's impossible to remember everything. See the comments below for suggestions on how to link back if you are on Soundcloud, YouTube and/or Vimeo.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Bird Loves MATRIXSYNTH!

via Keegan:

"This is my new cat, Bird. She loves watching youtube synth videos."

Awesome! Thank you Bird! :)


Wednesday, November 24, 2010

50,000+ Posts on MATRIXSYNTH - Happy Thanksgiving!!!

Passed 50,000 posts today. This is post 50,020. Also passed over 10,000,000 visits. Sitemeter has the site at 10,110,783 visits as of this post - 20,626,395 pageviews. That is pretty amazing. Synth maniacs! 50,000+ posts on synthesizers in just over five years! 50,000+, all manually posted. Think about that! It's crazy... It's going to be a good Thanksgiving with an extra "synth meaning" this year thanks to all of you!
Happy Thanksgiving!!!

Thursday, November 11, 2010

MATRIXSYNTH Post Guidelines and Site Tips

See this page. This will go up once a month.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Gakken SX-150 hacking the controller - tutorial

on Coagula here "In another post I wrote about the Gakken SX-150, now I explain how I created a "giant" controller (50cm) for this mini synthesizer, but in order to make this change I had to first understand a little more about the original control system. The strip on the Gakken SX-150 is simply a resistor of about 75 Kilohom. Looking at the schematics I found on the Matrixsynth blog I could think for an alternative to the control system of Gakken...."

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

MATRIXSYNTH Skin for Firefox

If you are running Firefox, like black, green, and clean, give it a try here. If anyone wants to make the equivalent for other browsers, go for it. The image in this post is the one I used. I just went with the minimum graphic size in black and placed the image on the top right corner. Font color is #00FF00.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Reminder & MATRIXSYNTH Mini Banners

If you like MATRIXSYNTH, link to it, especially if your stuff goes up here. The more people that know about the site, the more our community grows and the more people will see your stuff. Always spread the word...

Update: Mark Webb asked me if I had a mini button/banner. Good idea. Can't believe I didn't think of that. Here are a couple, the first courtesy of modd3d


You can host the image or img src link to:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_rScBRKlTdoE/TGmhWotP9vI/AAAAAAABZtM/RVsCRLAodpA/s400/matrixsynth-ad-modd3d.jpg

slightly larger:


grab or img src link to:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_rScBRKlTdoE/TGmiQw7Is6I/AAAAAAABZtU/M3Cu_dcDemM/s400/msbanner.png

If anyone wants an alternative size or comes up with one, let me know and I'll update this post. Please don't spend time creating a new logo design though, this basic one stays.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

The Chemical Brothers - Another World


YouTube via parlophone | July 28, 2010

"'Further' Out Now: iTunes LP - [Further - The Chemical Brothers] Amazon [Further on Amazon]. Rest of the world - http://links.emi.com/further-row

http://thechemicalbrothers.com - Visual accompaniament to Another World. The latest single to be taken from the amazing audio visual experience Further.

Parlophone/Astralwerks

Visuals by Flat Nose George: http://www.flatnosegeorge.com
Directed by Adam Smith & Marcus Lyall
Production Company Black Dog/RSA Films"

Note: I have a pretty strict rule that I only put up posts that let you get a feel for specific synths either visually or via audio. Synth music posts in general go up on MATRIXSYNTH-C. I'm making the exception for this one as Tom of The Chemical Brothers called out MATRIXSYNTH as the best synth site on the web back on the old Chemical Brothers site. See the exact quote on the right. This was back when MATRIXSYNTH just started. I had no idea he put that up until I ran across it. Pretty cool. Thank you Tom!!!
That and the green of course goes great with the site. :)

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

5 Years of MATRIXSYNTH!!!

It's that time again. Today is the five year anniversary of MATRIXSYNTH!!! I like to share a little bit about how the site ticks in these posts, some of the history for those that don't know it, some miscellaneous insights this year, and of course some numbers.

It all started back in July 20, of 2005, with a brief post wishing Dr. Bob Moog well. The brevity of the post was a bit of a foreshadowing of what the site would become.

I started the blog when the old site just wasn't cutting it anymore. I created the old site back in 1997 (before The Matrix movies ever existed BTW) as a personal portal for the various synth sites I used to visit. In 2005, blogging was just becoming popular. I found that I had a difficult time keeping track of things in email, my favorites list and the old site. The problem was many of the interesting bits were buried within sites, and possibly more importantly, a new method of sharing information was just emerging. Flickr (Feb 2004) and YouTube (Feb 2005) were just starting, Vimeo (Nov 2004) was relatively unknown, and SoundCloud (Aug 2007) wasn't even around yet.

In 2005, I created MATRIXSYNTH, the blog. I started tracking "Everything Synth". I let people know on various synth forums and email lists I belonged to about the site. In time it grew and people started sending things in. I realized what the site was becoming. It wasn't just a place for me to track stuff, but a place for anyone into synths. It was a daily heartbeat on what people were doing with their synths, not just a news site. In the beginning I posted every single image that came in on Flickr featuring a synth, and every single video on YouTube. It was fascinating at the time, because before then you never really saw what other people were doing, unless you knew them, or unless they had the means to host their own website. Flickr, YouTube, SoundCloud, Blogger, Word Press, and other hosting sites changed this. The site became a place for people to share and promote what they were doing. I received emails from people thanking me for connections they made because of the site. Many sites announced themselves here including DVDBORN (Jan 2, 2006), Muff Wiggler (Dec 4, 2006), TRASH_AUDIO (Oct 22, 2007), Analog Suicide (Dec 23, 2007), NOISESOURCE (April 22, 2008), and many others. The site currently gets over half a million pageviews a month. Think about that. More on the numbers in a bit. Before I get bombarded, I no longer post site announcements simply for the sake of site announcements. At 50 posts a day, it would be suicide and with the amount I post and I would take you all down with me. :) Posts have to be about specific synths, and via links are given.

There have also been a plethora of product announcements from manufacturers that read the site - too many to list. BTW, be sure see the MANUFACTURERS section on the right and the MANUFACTURERS page for a list of manufacturers that read the site and have taken the time out to send in a small 250px x 100px image. Note placement on this page is free. If you are a manufacturer, send me an image and I will add it. Note some dealers are listed there as well. Back to some history...

When I first started the blog, I wanted to put up a post at least once a week. It turned out to be more like once a day. I then wanted to put a minimum of five posts up a day, and then 10. I remember days when I didn't think I was going to hit it, and I remember days when I was so stressed out due to the sheer number and complexity of certain posts that I was ready to give it up. Every single post on this site is put up manually - there is zero automation. I now put up close to fifty posts every single day, seven days a week! With the exception of August 6, 2005, at least one post has gone up every single day since the inception of the site. If I only knew then what I know now I would have posted something on that one day. [Note: I thought I missed more than one day, but I couldn't find others - check out the archives in the right by clicking on the side triangles to drill down - if anyone finds another day I missed, let me know]. For those that are curious, it takes me anywhere between about four and six hours a day to do this. How do I have the time? Eight hours (usually less) of sleep, eight hours work, and eight hours for everything else (blog). I do contract-based work from home, so the entire day is pretty much spent behind my laptop working, with only a few breaks for food and a bike ride so I don't melt into my lazy boy. Weekends I get out and make time for my synths, friends, family, etc. The site pretty much is a full time job including weekends. How do I do it? I love it!!! That and there is a technique I honed over the years as crazy as it sounds. The more you do anything, the easier it becomes. It doesn't feel like work to me and even though things are not automated, I have a rhythm and a routine that I have relatively mastered. It took a couple of years to get that rhythm down. Now it's a bit of an addiction. That and with contract-based work I also work in surges, meaning some days are busier than others, and in between contracts I have more time on the blog. It all just works out. This brings me back to the note on that very first post back on July 20. At the time, I really didn't know what to say. It was an awkward first post but with the news that day, I knew that had to be the first post. I thought about what to write and I realized there was nothing I could say, other than providing the link, asking others to wish him well, and getting the heck out of the way. The post wasn't about me, it was about him. That has pretty much evolved into the theme of the site to this day. I want people to experience what others are doing, not my reflections on it. Once I realized that, posting became much easier. Part of this was also realizing that the number of posts going up can be difficult to consume, for myself included. The less I say the less time I waste. I try to keep things short, to the point, and myself out of the post. The site is a bit like conveyor belt sushi, a buffet, or tapas bar. Stuff constantly comes in and you can either take all of it in, or just pick what you want. The cool thing is everything is archived so you can come back to it later.

Some people ask me why Blogger? The reason is it's free and it's owned and hosted by Google. If I'm ever unable to run the site for whatever reason it will stay up. We have lost too many great synth sites over the years unfortunately. The excellent drummachine.com immediately comes to mind. If anyone remembers the site, it was the best site dedicated to drum machines - tons of pics, details and audio samples. It's now a promotion site. This is going to sound crazy, but the limitations of Blogger also keep things a bit more manageable and in check. I like the site as it is. It is what it is and that's what makes the site.

Time for some numbers. I'll try to keep it short this time. According to Google Analytics, since the inception of the site, there has been a total of 8,054,806 visits and 16,856,224 pageviews. That's up from 5,774,890 visits and 11,233,869 pageviews as of last year. If you look at the bottom of the site you will see Site Meter has me at 8,337,466 pageviews. This is because I started Google Analytics after Site Meter and I missed adding back the Google Analytics code a couple of times when updating my template. If you click on the map, you will see we are still missing a few countries. North Korea, I haven't said anything bad about you!!! It blows me away to think visits came in from some places. I chose the map for the image in this post because of this. This site is global. You get to see what people around the world are doing with synths on a daily basis. The site exists because of everyone out there who loves synths - you, me, and those that may not even know about the site yet. It's been a great five years and I look forward to the next. THANK YOU!!!

Update: Twitter: via Chris Carter!!!
http://chriscarter.co.uk/ @chris_carter_
http://www.throbbing-gristle.com/
http://www.chrisandcosey.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Carter_%28musician%29


HAPPY 5th BIRTHDAY MATRIXSYNTH from Chris Carter on Vimeo.


"Experimentally yours...

Chris Carter"

Update: I forgot to note the number of posts since the inception of the site. Including this post there was a total of 43,951.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

The Fantastic Musical Journey to the Plasticine World

YouTube via onephatcat | July 18, 2010 Thanks for the shout out!!! That's what I'm talking about! "Claymation. Analog and digital synthesizers. Plasticine Clay Synthesizers. Psychedelic Video FX. This video is inspired by and is in part a tribute to, and contains tributes to, the matrixsynth website. If you love electronic music and electronic instruments, be sure to visit http://www.matrixsynth.blogspot.com Music & Video performed and recorded live on July 4th with Blue Mikey for iPhone. Claymation recorded using HUE HD webcam and Frame-By-Frame for Mac. Video edited and processed in iMovie. Instruments used: Roland DR-110 analog drum machine, Roland EF-303 Groove Effects (syn/delay), MAM SQ-16, MAM Map1, Korg EA-1 synth, Korg ER-1 Drum synthesizer, Korg DW-8000 synthesizer, Waldorf MicroQ. Claymation instruments: MAM SQ-16, Waldorf Microwave XT, Roland EF-303, Korg EA-1 synth, Korg ER-1, KrK Rokit 5 clay monitors, clay mixer." Update: Set and cast of Fantastic Musical Trip to the Plasticine World flickr by joelbrave

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

MATRIXSYNTH by ben (shoontz) shannon . illustrator

via ben (shoontz) shannon . illustrator

Golem voice: "We loves it... My precious... MATRIXSYNTH..."

Click here for all posts contributed by Ben Shannon.
Update: be sure to see the rest of http://www.shoontz.com if you haven't already. There's some pretty amazing art there including some synth babe art.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Spread the Love and Thank You!

I just realized I've been doing a piss poor job promoting the site. I just post what comes in and hope people discover it and spread the word. The only way people will find out about the site is through word of mouth. I rarely stop to think whether other sites are linking to me. Now and then I will check sites I have posted on for the heck of it, but I rarely do and I rarely ask. I figure if people like the site, they will link to it. To those that do, a HUGE THANK YOU!!! I really appreciate it. BTW, if you do link to this site feel free to link back to your site in the comments of this post. It would be cool to know and readers can check out your site. Note: to make a link active just add the "a href" anchor tags like you would on your site in the comments here. It will come through.

cheers,
matrix

Update: Thanks to those that took out the time to comment. I added a "Friends of MATRIXSYNTH" link to this post on the right of the site, in the EXCLUSIVES section, so people see it over time. Considering the name of link, I should also note the Kind Words on MATRIXSYNTH section. Thanks again to those that support the site by spreading the word.

Friday, April 23, 2010

First steps with Nodal


YouTube via attorks — April 23, 2010 — "Last Tuesday I saw this Nodal 1.7 announcement on the MATRIXSYNTH Blog [all Nodal posts]. This morning I visited the Nodal website and looked at the 2 videos there. I thought it looked interesting so I downloaded a demo which was still version 1.6. This evening I have tried it and bought the license for some less than 30 euro's because I wanted to be able to save. Here you can see the first results. My attempt is very basic though. There are three sequences. The first driving the Creamware MiniMax ASB, the 2nd the Clavia Nord Lead 1 and the 3rd the Waldorf Q Keyboard. Try Nodal yourself, it's fun (and cheap):
http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~cema/n..."

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Post Number 40,000

Just a milestone. This is post number 40,000 on the site. In under five years. Kawazy.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

A warriors theme


YouTube via attorks.

BTW, any video that mentions MATRIXSYNTH gets an automatic post.

"I always wonder where the inspiration come from but again I think this video is different then all the previous ones. It began this evening when looking at new items on MATRIXSYNTH website when I looked at this video of the FabFilter Twin 2 virtual synth. I liked the demo and downloaded the trail at there website. I began to play with it in Ableton Live as VST and when browsing through the drums presets, I found an interesting snare drum. I altered the sound somewhat and the idea was born. Apart from the 5 MIDI tracks for controlling the Doepfer MAQ16/3 using the Novation Launchpad in Ableton Live, there are only 2 MIDI tracks with 3 clips each: one for the FabFilter Twin 2 drumsound and one controlling the Creamware MiniMax ASB with the bass sound. Then I dailed in two 8-step sequences on the Doepfer MAQ16/3 and it sounded very interesting. Added some Mellotron strings from the Roland XP-80 and there you have it. The full video is about 13 minutes which I will upload soon to my website."

Friday, March 05, 2010

deepsonic


I haven't put up a post on the Deepsonic synth site since 2006. Swissdoc wrote in to let me know there have a been a number of updates. Indeed there have. They now have an RSS feed (I just subbed), and very recent updates including the following:

05.03.2010 Update :Roland Juno-106 mp3s:
04.03.2010 NEW! :Sony DTC-ZE700:
02.03.2010 NEW! :Quasimidi Sirius:
27.02.2010 Update :Matrix-6R Fat Sawth:
25.02.2010 Update :Clavia Nord Modular Expansion:

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

CODEORGAN


Find out what your site sounds like here. Feel free to link in the comments.
Remember to use simple html "a href" tags to link.

http://www.codeorgan.com/?url=matrixsynth.blogspot.com
http://www.codeorgan.com/?url=matrixsynthb.blogspot.com
http://www.codeorgan.com/?url=matrixsynthc.blogspot.com




Take the poll, then read the comments. :)

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