Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Leo D e William P tocam Radioactivity
YouTube via uilames. Sent my way via W. Roland JP-8080 vocoder.
Beem - The Future

Click here for the full set.
I'll be playing with my Legos tonight.
Top shot: "Inspired by Arp Odyssey and Linn 9000 drum machine."
Bottom: "Inspired by Roland SH1000, Revox B77, and Linn 9000 drum machine."

Korg PS-900

There are some great shots of synths in this set. Be sure to click through.
full size
Cube Quest

I ran a quick search for Cube Quest and found this site. The game came out in 1984. On the site there are some interesting samples and video. It was a laser disc based game, so I assumed the audio was previously recorded, which could be the case for some of it, but I also found schematics listed here. In the first set of schematics, you can clearly see pages on the "Sound Synthesizer." I'm curious if anyone knows what kind of synth engine this had as well as any info on recordings that could have been done on the laser disc. In the second set of schematics you can see a parts list for "Mother Sounds."




Update: videos, via kroffe in the comments. Embedding is disabled for these so here are the links:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=4p081CnHDHo
http://youtube.com/watch?v=ikFNUA6Be4U
http://youtube.com/watch?v=1EwERR1bgWs
Found this also:
http://www.brightcove.tv/title.jsp?title=292663199&channel=288075
Starcade episode #98 - check last segment at 20.40 ;)
Update via Kathy in the comments:
"I own the original laser disc that was used to make the image. I worried that it might go bad, so wanted it captured.
Parts of it can be played on a regular Laser Disc player,like the attract videos you see on YouTube, but to make the game work, the tunnel images (all made by Able Graphics, an old pioneer in the graphics field for TV commercials) are interleaved images of stepping through the tunnel, every other frame (or so) was played forward, and then the interleaved images were played in reverse (and recorded in reverse) and a "loop" could me played that made the tunnel seem to go on forever. If you watch that on a regular Laser Disc player, it is a jumble of forward and backward images that do not make sense, and is over in less than a few second. The program steps through the interleaved images on the disc in the right order (forward and back) to make an endless loop of that tunnel.
There was audio on the LD as well, but only game sounds from the hardware played during the game while in a tunnel. The audio you see in YouTube videos are from the "splash" videos (attract mode) that played when the game was idle.
Sorry for being anonymous, but the LD was a copyrighted item! :-)"
Encore Frequency Shifter
YouTube via stretta.
"For an ebay auction. A demonstration of the Encore Frequency Shifter processing a drum loop."
Per the previous post, stretta has more modules up for auction here.
Nord Modular Overview
YouTube via stretta.
"Created for an ebay auction. A summary of some of the features of the Nord Modular G2"
Stretta also has a ton of modules up for auction here.
Workspace and Environment: the deep element

"Favorite Hardware
It'd have to be my portable Doepfer cases. Well not the case itself, but what's inside. I'm a huge fan of Doepfer, Cwejman, Plan B and Livewire modules. These things have been around the world with me and kept me on constantly inspired. They have really changed the way I approach the processes of making music and sound design. I do love my Sherman Filterbank II and Juno 106 though. I really love all my gear. Its better than children. Yeah, I said it..."
Kamoni - Reconstructed Uno (Retrofitted Human Jungle DnB)
YouTube via kamoni.
"Kamoni plays some fresh new breaks.
Equipment:
• Ableton Live 7 Suite with the new drum racks
• Roland SPD-20
• 3 foot pedals
• Coffee"
Rhodes Polaris EPROM Code
"David writes, "pol_fw9.zip [28K] contains the 4 binary files for the four EPROMs for a Polaris. The firmware in the files is Rev 9. Each image gets programmed into its own 2764 EPROM and the put in the Polaris in the socket corresponding to the file name (e.g., Z10 into the socket labelled Z10, etc.).
"The current firmware version can be determined by pressing LF-D-2 and watching to see which of the numbered buttons flash. A common version of firmware in the field is '5' (i.e., the '5' button will flash)."
See also Chroma EPROM Code"
Click here for more info including the download on the excellent Rhodes Chroma Site.
"The current firmware version can be determined by pressing LF-D-2 and watching to see which of the numbered buttons flash. A common version of firmware in the field is '5' (i.e., the '5' button will flash)."
See also Chroma EPROM Code"
Click here for more info including the download on the excellent Rhodes Chroma Site.
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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