Friday, June 13, 2008
Gate Pikachu with A100
YouTube via unyo303
"Kaseo created Gate Pikachu.
http://www.youtube.com/user/Kaseo"
Ept - Eont on Korg Electribes
YouTube via nikoeatsabear
"Check out my other music at http://www.myspace.com/eptmusic .
This is a track written entirely on a pair of Korg Electribes (ESX-1 and EMX-1). If you have any questions about the music or the machines, I'd be happy to answer them.
Sorry about the video quality, I found the camera in a ditch."
Doepfer Basic System 1
"2x Standard VCO A-110, 2x ADSR A-140, 2 x LFO A-145, 1x Ring Modulator A-114, 1 x Audio Divider A-115 ,1 x VC Waveform Processor A-116, 1 x Noise/Random A-118, 1 x VCF1 A-120 (24dB low pass 1), 1 x VCF2 A-121 (12dB multimode filter), 1 x linear VCA A-130, 1 x logarithmic VCA A-131, 1 x linear Mixer A-138a, 1 x logarithmic Mixer A-138b, 1 x Dual S&H A-148, 1 x Dual VC Switch A-150, 1 x Trigger Divider A-160, 1 x Trigger Sequencer A-161, 1 x Dual Trigger Delay A-162, 1 x Dual Slew Limiter A-170, 1 x Multiple I A-180"
Garfield Doctor Click

"The Doctor Click can be driven by both steady and wildly varying sources, including click tracks, tape codes (Roland, Oberheim, Linn, etc.), synthesizer clocks, live drumming, or its own internal crystal-based clock. It does not have MIDI.
The outputs consist of nine timebases (7 are fixed, two are variable), two rhythmically triggered envelopes or LFO's (12V, .5V), trigger, trigger to click converter, inverter, delay, start, and step programming functions.
The Doctor Click click has two separate channels for producing the two variable timebases each with its own set of rhythm selector switches. The first row of labels is the timebase interpretation (ie. how many clicks) and the second row is notation interpretation (eg. quarter note, eighth-note triplet, etc). While that might sound confusing, it should make sense when it's sitting in front of you. Channel 1 (four bars to 64th triplet) has Envelope 1, Gate, Time Lag, and the Auto Programmer. Channel 2 (1/4 note to 32nd note) has Envelope 2 and the headphone output (which can also be used as a second arpeggiator clock).

It also has recording and programming features (which I've never used) that can store up to 1,000 events.
The gates and triggers have adjustable pulse width, and can inverted for either falling or rising edge. The envelope outputs can be used as gates or additional clocks.
Inputs: Pulse, Tape Code A/B, Tape Code C, External Metronome Trigger, Inverter In, Delay In, Reset, Play, Enter
Outputs: 12X (Roland CR68/78, SCI), 24X (MemoryMoog, MXR), 48X (LinnDrum, Roland MC-4, E-Mu), 64X (PPG), 96X (Oberheim DSX, DMX, DX), 348X (Fairlight), DIN Sync (Roland x0xbox, Korg), Gate (5V/15V), Trigger (5v/15V), Trigger to Click, Time Lag, Envelope 1, Envelope 2, Headphone, Metronome, Inverter Out, Delay Out, 5V Start, Ground Start
Knobs: Channel 1 (PW, Attack, Decay, Amount, Gate PW), Channel 2 (PW, Attack, Decay, Amount, Headphone Level), Metronome Level, Delay Amount"
Prophet 5 Tribute Site Updated

"Block scheme, patch selection tutorial added, defective links repaired"
"The block schematic was made by Enrico Gremes. He made it poster size. It would be nice to have it hanging at the wall in the studio. The program file selection illustration was made by Eus Veldhuisen."

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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