
Sunday, March 11, 2007
Roland Jupiter-8

Samples at the auction while it's up. Note this one has Encore MIDI.
Update: I went ahead and mirrored the samples here.
Update: Note the auction and the samples were from hexfix93 of velvet acid christ.
MFB-SYNTH VIDS
MFB-SYNTH LITE II
MFB Synth II
MFB Synth II video 2
YouTube via shleedance. Title link takes you to more.
MFB Synth II
MFB Synth II video 2
YouTube via shleedance. Title link takes you to more.
ARP 2600
Keytek CTS-2000

Click here for shots pulled via this auction.
Details:
"333 digital sampled wareforms * Control of up to six wave tables per voice *Complete analog processing for each voice * 8 voice polyphonic w/ two digital oscillators per voice * 48 user presets each storing all parameters * 61 key weighted w/full dynamic control."
Analog? Anyone know more about this unit?
EML Poly Box
Details:
"Poly-Box is a pitch following variable chord generator controlled by your synthesizer and Poly-Box's own keyboard with built-in memory. Poly-Box takes a single pitch from your synthesizer and creates two banks of pitch sources. Each pitch bank contains 13 simultaneously available pitch sources at precise semitone intervals - covering an entire chromatic octave. The pitch banks may be in the same or different octaves, and can cover the range from one above to three octaves below the synthesizer oscillator."
Saturday, March 10, 2007
Godwin 849 String Concert
Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction
Details:
"There doesn't seem to be much information about Godwin keyboards available online, except that they're good, and they're not very common. Here are a couple of the mentions I've found on the String Concert series:
"Logans and other string machines that use this system (such as the Hohner String Performer and the Godwin String Concert) are, in my opinion, vastly superior to more famous paraphonic designs such as the Solina, the Rolands, and the Omnis."
Sound on Sound
"A very beautiful and appealing early string synthesiser, warm, sweet and dirty. The chorus and tremolo swirl and make every sound beautifully analogue. Beats the Solina and that says something."
Sonicstate
A Godwin 249 String Concert recently sold on Ebay for £530 (see past listings for Godwin Synth.) This is its big brother, the Godwin 849 String Concert (Symphony). But unfortunately, it's not working. The string sounds are all so quiet as to be practically inaudible, though if you turn the volume on the amplifier fully up you can hear that the controls and sliders do have an effect. The volume slider doesn't do anything though. In the past I seem to remember wiring up an amp to some part of the circuit-board and getting full volume, and concluding that some component might have gone in one of the effects sections, but I don't really know anything about electronics or vintage keyboards.
There's also a brass section which currently doesn't seem to be working at all, though it has worked intermittently in the past, churning out the odd punchy analogue brass sounds.
One of the selection buttons is broken, and I've dismantled another to see how it worked, but that shouldn't be too hard to put back. All the other keys and buttons seem to work, insofar as they light up, make faint noises, etc. Cosmetically, it's not too bad really, with no broken notes, and the sheet-holder still tucked into a clip inside the case. (These things come built in to the bottom of the carrying case. They're fairly chunky and heavy, and look quite cool in a retro way.)
Controls are: String Volume, Brass volume, Cello, Viola, Violin, Organ, Brass 1/2/3/4/Wah/Woh, Cello level, Violin level, Viola level, Bass, Treble, Chorus, Tremolo, Envelope Attack/Sustain/Volume, Vibrato Depth/Speed/Delay, buttons for Classic/Concert/Brass/Vibrato/PolyTrig/Octave, Expression pedal input, High/Low output.
The internal circuit boards are all present and it hasn't been raided for spares. In the right hands, this could be restored into a collector's item. But since it's not presently working, it's £15 with no guarantees and no reserve."
via Rob.
via this auction
Details:
"There doesn't seem to be much information about Godwin keyboards available online, except that they're good, and they're not very common. Here are a couple of the mentions I've found on the String Concert series:
"Logans and other string machines that use this system (such as the Hohner String Performer and the Godwin String Concert) are, in my opinion, vastly superior to more famous paraphonic designs such as the Solina, the Rolands, and the Omnis."
Sound on Sound
"A very beautiful and appealing early string synthesiser, warm, sweet and dirty. The chorus and tremolo swirl and make every sound beautifully analogue. Beats the Solina and that says something."
Sonicstate
A Godwin 249 String Concert recently sold on Ebay for £530 (see past listings for Godwin Synth.) This is its big brother, the Godwin 849 String Concert (Symphony). But unfortunately, it's not working. The string sounds are all so quiet as to be practically inaudible, though if you turn the volume on the amplifier fully up you can hear that the controls and sliders do have an effect. The volume slider doesn't do anything though. In the past I seem to remember wiring up an amp to some part of the circuit-board and getting full volume, and concluding that some component might have gone in one of the effects sections, but I don't really know anything about electronics or vintage keyboards.
There's also a brass section which currently doesn't seem to be working at all, though it has worked intermittently in the past, churning out the odd punchy analogue brass sounds.
One of the selection buttons is broken, and I've dismantled another to see how it worked, but that shouldn't be too hard to put back. All the other keys and buttons seem to work, insofar as they light up, make faint noises, etc. Cosmetically, it's not too bad really, with no broken notes, and the sheet-holder still tucked into a clip inside the case. (These things come built in to the bottom of the carrying case. They're fairly chunky and heavy, and look quite cool in a retro way.)
Controls are: String Volume, Brass volume, Cello, Viola, Violin, Organ, Brass 1/2/3/4/Wah/Woh, Cello level, Violin level, Viola level, Bass, Treble, Chorus, Tremolo, Envelope Attack/Sustain/Volume, Vibrato Depth/Speed/Delay, buttons for Classic/Concert/Brass/Vibrato/PolyTrig/Octave, Expression pedal input, High/Low output.
The internal circuit boards are all present and it hasn't been raided for spares. In the right hands, this could be restored into a collector's item. But since it's not presently working, it's £15 with no guarantees and no reserve."
via Rob.
PREVIOUS PAGE
NEXT PAGE
HOME
© 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













© 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