I finally got around to watching this video in entirety. Yes, sometimes I don't even get to see everything I put up. :( Anyway, for any Skinny Puppy fans out there, check out the update.
Synth Ollie sent me a motherload of 82 scans of various synth articles. I spent a good chunk of the day organizing them into individual flickr sets. Click on the following links for each corresponding one.
YouTube via Analogger. "I used the external trigger input on the Attack Sustain to trigger the decay envelope - which gave me a rhythmic gating effect on my guitar. I fed that into the HOG which I had set to give a sort of organ sound. I used the expression pedal to open and close the filter on the HOG. The result is kind of like what Townshend got when he ran his Lowrey organ thru the VCS3. My expression pedal was taking the place of the VCS3's lfo.
On one midi track on my sequencer I triggered 8th notes on the Virus which was set to a bass drum patch. That was fed into the trigger input on the Attack Sustain - you don't hear that bass drum - it was just used to trigger the envelope on the Attack Sustain. On another midi track I wrote the drum pattern which was in sync with the 8th note trigger sequence.
I had just put new strings on my guitar and had not clipped the ends. The guitar is just out of frame but you'll see my cat Oscar as he climbs up on a table and starts playing with one of the strings. Sometimes Oscar will just lay there and watch me twiddle knobs. He also likes the blinking lights."
YouTube via ZonkOut "KR-55 into the X-911 (dry and wet outputs panned left and right). KR is sending trigger pulse to step the SQ-10, which is sending CV to the X-911."
"by David Crombie, The Synthesizer & electronic keyboard handbook.Dates from 1984. Book is in excellent condition.Excellent articles on analog synthesis among other subjects and great pictures of vintage instruments such as the Mellotron, Fairlight, Moog modular, etc"
"This is a Maartist's Music Pack DX-II RAM cartridge for Yamaha keyboards. It reads on the side of the box, "for Yamaha products using RAM 4 cartridges provides 256 RAM memories - 4 times standard cartridges." I believe that these work on DX series keyboards hence the designation of DX-II."