YouTube via ripe909 "Well I am sick with a cold and wanted to turn the studio equipment off... So you get to suffer through my attempt at cheesy supersaw trance! Sequenced on the Octopus, SE BassLine x0xb0x, machinedrum, revolution, JP-8080, oh and some virus."
"Gorf is a simple 8 step sequencer. It isn't as clever or complex as the Sequentix P3 nor as expensive as certain other sequencers.
I was bored one sunday, and wanted to build a simple sequencer I could use to test Defender and other synths I was building."
snip on Defender:
"Defender is my current project, and as such, is a work in progress, so please, don't ask for schematics, code or if you can buy it.
The synth is broken down into three parts,
1. The Voice Card, which holds the filter, oscillators, EGs and LFOs
2. Controller Card, which handles midi, voice assignment and patch storage
3. Front Panel card, which handles the rotary encoders, pitch wheels, etc, etc"
Update via Lord Avon in the comments:
Video demo of GorF (playing Monowave II skin on the SoundArt Chameleon)
Video details:
"GorF is a minimal step sequencer.
I built it to help testing my synth designs.
It sends MIDI notes and velocity on a user selectable Midi channel along with two MIDI CC's (user selectable) and of course has variable sequence length.
You can turn steps on and off using the buttons, but I forgot to show this feature. When I do the next video I'll be sure to show this feature.
It's still in the early stages of development, and has one or two little bugs in it.
The sound is coming from the MonowaveII sound skin.
"I came across this album in a dilapidated Leeds (UK) record shop for just a couple euros and have held onto it for dear life — BBC Radiophonic Workshop on vinyl doesn’t sell cheap. The standout track for me is easily Vespucci, a funky saunter with a very sampleable cool synth melody. The abstract cover from this 1973 release looks quite a bit like a CD exploding, perhaps another ahead-of-their-time move from these old-timers."