MATRIXSYNTH


Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Onar3D - Maria Louiza


Onar3D - Maria Louiza from Onar3D on Vimeo.
via Ilias: "The synths I used were: Roland JD800 for lead and arpeggio... and pad I think; Love that synth! Virus C for bass and other pad, and JX8P for bell-like synth in the end. The drums are my TD20 kit Smile emoticon"

See this Onar3D post for more details.

video description from Vimeo:
"The graphics are procedurally rendered in real-time, and are controlled primarily through musical notation data (MIDI).

The software used for the visuals is Mother 0.3, a program I've developed for VJ-ing with multiple Processing.org sketches.

The music I have also made myself, using all hardware musical instruments. The synthesizers are mostly programmed, but the drums I played live on an electronic drumkit.

Please excuse the visual quality! Until I get my hands on a high end frame-grabber for recording from my computers VGA output, my simple little scan converter will have to do. Note that the dropped frames are a capture artifact as well, on my PC it runs smoothly...

Have a look at the screen grabs on flickr.com/photos/10401337@N05/sets/72157616429723122/ to get an impression of what it really looks like!

For more information, visit onar3d.com"

CSI/Speco SS-1 Audio Generator

via these auctions via this electro-music.com thread

"Solid State Sine/Square Wave Generator. It offers a frequency response of 20 to 200 kHz square and 20 to 2 MHz sine. It features a 0, - 20 dB, and - 40 dB output attenuation."

via appliancide

see the labels below for other devices from CSI and WaveTek.


RHODES CHROMA

via this auction





Rather a rude noise

flickr by Pighood

"Would you believe it?"

full size

MOOG 907 Filter Bank on VEMIA

listed here
Unfortunately there isn't a new image of the actual item. The history is interesting though: "Brand new original new old stock Moog 907 Fixed Filter Bank from 1973, being sold by a recognized figure in the field who was formerly Vice President, Studio Systems Division, Moog Music, Inc. and worked with Bob Moog for more than 20 years. Here's what he says:- 'The unit offered has never been mounted, there are no screw marks whatsoever. It is brand new as of its date of manufacture, which is 08-28-73 (August 28 1973), and inspected on 08-29-73. The assembly is by J.P. which is undoubtedly Mr. Patronski. The serial number (P) is: 7338, and these data plus the handwritten number 11728 are written on the yellow Moog Music Inc. cardboard/paper attached to this filter. It is clean as a whistle, and has been stored in a humidity controlled environment since the day it left the Moog factory in Cheektowaga, NY, USA. in the 'seventies. I took it from the Moog factory in lieu of salary, as per agreement with management at the time, as the old Moog Electronics, Inc. was going under. Note that this is the relatively rare 4-wide Model 907, not found everywhere.' VEMIA NOTE: Although this has four fewer frequencies than the 914 that we had been hoping for, it is still one of the nicest individual lots we have ever had in the auction. These filterbanks are simply irreplaceable and impossible to copy exactly, and to find a brand new one with such provenance is amazing. This is the only module being sold by this owner at this time - and it's been hard enough persuading him finally to part with this one piece of history! A photo has not been possible, but we will show a photo of a similar (not completely identical) used module, taken by the seller in the 70s. The module is untested (since 1973!), and it is possible it may need minor servicing although it is brand new. It will be packed with great care, and a written provenance provided by the seller."

Note the VEMIA auctions end this Saturday.

KORG PS3200

via this VEMIA auction

click the image for the full size shot.

Oberheim Two Voice and Four Voice

Two Voice via this VEMIA auction

Four Voice via this VEMIA auciton

Yamaha CS80

via this VEMIA auction

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

the keyboardist

flickr by harvesteridios

full size

1987 Apple Computer Reseller Training Video - Apple MIDI Interface - First Half


YouTube via jafafah0ts. sent my way via peahix
"Clip 5 of 6 clips from a 1987 Apple training Video for resellers. Parts 1-4 are titled "Training for the Laserwriter II Family of Printers."
1. Extending the Lead
2. The Print Controller
3. Imaging
4. Xerography

Part 5 on the tape is "An Introduction to the Apple MIDI Interface" which I have split into clips 5 and 6."

1987 Apple Computer Reseller Training Video - Apple MIDI Interface - Second Half

"Clip 6 of 6 clips from a 1987 Apple training Video for resellers. Parts 1-4 are titled "Training for the Laserwriter II Family of Printers."
1. Extending the Lead
2. The Print Controller
3. Imaging
4. Xerography

Part 5 on the tape is "An Introduction to the Apple MIDI Interface" which I have split into clips 5 and 6."

MOTU - Mark of the Unicorn

Update via Jafafa in the comments: "Thanks for linking to my videos. I just KNEW transcoding that old VHS tape was something others might find interesting!

If you're interested in other Apple (non-synth) stuff, be sure to check out the other clips from the video, old laserwriters, etc."
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