"More music on umop.com/parallax.htm Here's another version of my original song "The Leper" from my album "umop apisdn." Performed live at the Downtown Cafe in quasi-beautiful Bristol, CT."
The white Roland JD-800 on the lose. Note hamsterdunce is David C. Lovelace of http://umop.com/. He is the man behind The Packrat (scroll and click on the images when you get there), and he does the artwork for Metasonix. He also did the Matrix Packrate drawing for me on the right of this site. :) Dave rocks. You can find more info on his music projects including videos here, man of which have been featured here on MATRIXSYNTH.
"The client is actually a renowned German company called Sidsonic; they want to use some of my artwork for their planned Kontakt soundbank/library of Metasonix noises. Pretty cool!"
See the write-up and more at Hamsterdunce. Note each comic strip has a real life analogy. I hear from the creator Dave many will feature synths. You might recognize Dave from these prior posts and of course umop.com.
YouTube via hamsterdunce "More music on umop.com! This one-minute quick demo just scratches the surface of the ARP, an incredibly fun vintage modular that I got to mess around with a Analog Heaven Northeast on May 2nd, 2009." via https://twitter.com/hamsterdunce
MATRISYNTH Ts are $20 in the US and $25 outside the US. This includes the shipping cost, three MATRIXSYNTH cards and one magnet. A set of three cards and one magnet, minus the T, is $5.
The T-Shirts are from Gorilla Screen Printing - highly recommended. If you get Ts done by them, let them know you found out about them here.
Paypal any amount to matrixsynth *at* gmail.com. Be sure to include the shipping address, size and whether you'd like long or short sleeves.
Below are some MATRIXSYNTH Ts and cards spotted in the wild. If you have them, send them in!
"Here's an old unreleased Parallax song played on a Korg SV-1 RV. The sequence is naturally from a floppy-disk-fueled Korg O1/W from 1990-something, so the drums are primitive, to say the least. The lobsters are just there to keep us company.
Parallax CDs, artifacts of a synthesizer Utopia that is both fun and treacherous to visit, are available at umop.com/parallax.htm"
The wife and I were lucky enough to get a tour of the Moog factory in Asheville, NC recently, and while there I spent a little while in the sound lab making spacey noises. It was like being inside my own brain. I could have set up a tent in there."
Dave aka hamsterdunce is the author of The Packrat series and the man responsible for much of the artwork on Metasonix products.
"Another month of May, another annual Analog Heaven NorthEast (AHNE) gathering. This year it all went down at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA, in the rotunda of the Genko Uchida Building. Most people don't even get to see this kind of stuff in person, let alone touch it. One attendee called it a 'Synth Petting Zoo.'
This video breezes around the entire room in an almost unfairly brief fashion. Around every turn there was yet another mind-burrowing megapile of cables and knobs waiting for a scientist with a 300 I.Q. to actually figure out how to use. One presented even had a brainwave interface.
Granted, on a music level, there was about as much soul in the room as a stale can of tuna fish, but this gear isn't about soul. It's about building a sonic robot army in your basement and terrorizing your neighbors at 3AM.
Subscribe to my channel for more occasional synth-related videos, and check out umop.com for art, animation, and other craparoni."
YouTube via hamsterdunce "An outtake of a recent video interview I made for SonicState.com when my Himalayan kitten (Dusty) steals the show and starts playing synth music behind me that actually sounds pretty friggin' good. That jerk. It's bad enough that he's better looking, but I figured I at least had all the talent up in here's."
YouTube via hamsterdunce — April 26, 2010 — "More music on umop.com/parallax.htm. Here's the 2010 gathering of Northeastern synth nerds! Incredible modulars & vintage analog synthesizers of all shapes, sizes, and tones."
Here's a tremendously epic speed solo & prog rock synth nightmare for you to feast your brainholes on, kiddies! The entire song employs a supersaw zaptron patch of my own creation on the amazing white Roland JD-800, with squelchy vintage '90s backing track crapola on the Korg 01W. No, no direct line input. First of all, I wanted you to hear the slamming finger slams. And secondly, SLAMMY SLAM SLAM"
The custom white Roland JD-800 is from CustomSynth.
This is an amazingly huge and beefy synthesizer. I am selling it for a friend of mine, but not until I've had a couple of days to play with it! It is the thickest, wettest, fattest synthesizer among at least a hundred that I've owned & played over the years. When I turn up the Cutoff 100% with the Emphasis at zero, the sky rips open and writhing Lovecraftian demons descend upon my condo complex, raining down javelins of sonic plasma into the fabric of ultimate blabbity blabbity you get the idea.
This is an auction demo so there's a few dry moments here and there where I'm autotuning and testing all 67 keys chromatically, but I kept it shreddy enough to hopefully entertain my faithful subscribers for a few minutes."
"Bucause I'm an insufferable nerd, I messed around with the Van Halen intro to "Jump" on a Korg Karma that I picked up on eBay for about twelve bucks, give or take $413."