Tuesday, December 09, 2025
OB-Xf - a great sounding Oberheim from the Surge team
video upload by abominable music
"OB-Xf is an open source (GPL3 license) project from the Surge team aiming to recreate the sound of the classic Oberheim OB-X. Available as a standalone application on macOS, Windows, and Linux (VST3, AU, LV2, CLAP formats). Building on existing work from 2DaT and discoDSP (OB-Xd) and still in Beta, this can be downloaded from the developer Github repo: https://github.com/surge-synthesizer/...
The synth doesn't have effects, I'm using Valhalla Supermassive for reverb in these demos
My custom patches are available for free on my KoFi page: https://ko-fi.com/s/6419dc9bea"
Friday, November 17, 2017
Analogue Solutions Mr Hyde and Dr Strangelove synthBlocks Signal Processors Now Available
"AS announces availability of Mr Hyde and Dr Strangelove synthBlocks signal processors
KINGSWINFORD, UK: British boutique electronic instruments innovator Analogue Solutions is proud to announce availability of Mr Hyde and Dr Strangelove — introducing its synthBlocks series of small and affordable desktop signal processors with two tantalisingly-named new products squarely aimed at laptop and audio plug-ins-focused digital musicians wishing to apply analogue, hands-on hardware processing to their sometimes sterile-sounding computer- based creations — as of November 17…
The synthBlocks series represents an all-new range of small and affordable desktop signal processors produced by British boutique electronic instruments innovator Analogue Solutions, an acclaimed company with over 24 years of designing serious-sounding synthesizers featuring fully-analogue audio paths with analogue LFOs (Low Frequency Oscillators) and EGs (Envelope Generators) to its notable name. Similarly, synthBlocks are all-analogue affairs — albeit with some lo-fi digital effects thrown in for good (musical) measure. Menus and software are all eschewed in favour of a hardy hardware approach. As such, synthBlocks are squarely aimed at laptop and audio plug-ins-focused digital musicians wishing to apply analogue, hands-on hardware processing to their sometimes sterile-sounding computer-based creations. Cue simply plugging the synthBlocks in question into an audio interface’s I/O connections, then routing drums, synths, vocals, or whatever out of the DAW (Digital Audio Workstation) and through the transistors and op-amps of the synthBlocks and recording the results back into the DAW. Something similar can be achieved by connecting the synthBlocks to the auxiliary buss of a mixing console — just like any other effects processor. Whatever the workflow, turning the dials and flicking the switches by hand of course changes the sound in realtime — often with radical results. Results of course can be radically different — depending on which of the two available synthBlocks are applied to any given sound signal.
Many might have heard of Mr Edward Hyde, an abominable alternative personality of Dr Henry Jekyll, a fictional character in Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde gothic novella first published in 1886. However, hearing Analogue Solutions’ Mr Hyde in the here and now is something else entirely! As announced, Mr Hyde was the first out of the starting blocks in its synthBlocks series as an analogue filter effects box bringing subtle to extreme filtering and modulation effects to the analogue processing production table. To further aid ease of use, Mr Hyde has quarter-inch input and output jacks on its rear, so can be connected straight to an audio interface or mixer without the need for adaptors. The topside of its distinctive blood-red panel features minijack sockets to patch with a semi-modular synth, such as Analogue Solutions’ relatively recently released Fusebox — an aptly-named, three-VCO (Voltage- Controlled Oscillator) true analogue monophonic synthesizer that favourably fuses the company’s characterful vintage sound with an advanced choice of modulation and melodic possibilities (in a beautifully-built box); ever-popular Eurorack small-format modular systems; or other modular systems.
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Happy Halloween! via organfairy
YouTube Uploaded by organfairy on Oct 27, 2011
I was going to save this for Halloween, but Halloween is always too short in my opinion. I figured it's good start the vibe early. It's time to get that party started. :) Halloween posts will be interspersed. Be sure to see the Halloween label below for more. If you have anything for Halloween, send it in!
"Last year at Halloween someone suggested that I should do Warmarch of the priests by Felix Mendelssohn as a Halloween video. I had already done a Halloween video so I decided that it should wait untill this year. So here it is!
It is also used as the opening of my favourit movie "the Abominable dr. Phibes" so I thought it could be fun to do a little dress-up. I don't have a shiny black cape like the one Phibes is wearing but I did have a red poncho. And in the right light this might also look kind off spooky. I have also added a little "old-movie" FX to the video.
The version of the warmarch that I present here is one that I recorded as a MIDI file back in 2000 for a Phibes fan page. But it is the Yamaha organ that are playing. It doesn't sound exactly like the usual organ version because I couldn't find the original organ sheet music at the public library or online. I could only find a version transcribed for a brass band. So this is actually a piece of organ music transcribed for brass band and then played on a digital organ..."
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© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH
























