Friday, November 13, 2009
Bugbrand Baby Bug "Bit" Crusher or Sample Rate Reducer
YouTube via djthomaswhite
"Okay, forgive me. I had the classic "thought I hit stop on the camera, but didn't, and when I started to record I actually stopped filming" while I did my 5 minute demo of this pedal. The footage here is the remaining footage I actually did capture and I will try to do another video of this pedal soon. Lovely on drum machines, robotic on vocals and an all around good time. Hard to find, but I got lucky as one does once in a great while on the bay."
MXR Phase 90 Phase Shifter Clone Tonepad
YouTube via djthomaswhite
"Here is my build of the MXR Phase 90 Clone available at www.tonepad.com. My enclosure was made by www.pedalpartsplus.com and the label is a water slide decal made in PowerPoint on a PC. The build I opted for includes matched transistors which give it a really nice tone. Enjoy the video! Thanks for stopping by, Thomas"
Thursday, November 12, 2009
The Bob Moog Foundation RSS Feeds
Main feed: http://www.moogfoundation.org/feed/
Comments: http://www.moogfoundation.org/comments/feed/
Point your readers to the feed and enjoy.
The Bob Moog Foundation
Comments: http://www.moogfoundation.org/comments/feed/
Point your readers to the feed and enjoy.
The Bob Moog Foundation
Announcing the 2010 Bob Moog Foundation Calendar

via The Bob Moog Foundation.
This would make a great stocking stuffer.

The calendar is comprised of five photos of Moog himself, taken from 1958-1974. The remaining photos are of:
* Leon Theremin
* Vladimir Ussachevsky
* Herb Deutsch
* Keith Emerson
* Paul Beaver and Bernie Krause
* Isao Tomita
* Joel Chadabe
* Roger Powell
The calendar was designed by graphics artist Rose Hecht in collaboration with the Bob Moog Foundaton. Through her designs, Rose pays hommage to the original Moog modular synthesizer as the instrument that spawned an industry and radically changed the face of popular music. The background of every page touts panels of knobs and patchbays — images taken from photos of an early modular that was used in Moog’s shop in the 60s. That instrument is one of the many priceless items in Moog’s archives.
The calendar is available for purchase on our online store. All proceeds go to fund our ongoing projects, including the preservation of the archives."
"What a beautiful, informative, and intricately detailed document the 2010 Bob Moog Foundation Calendar is! The rarely — if ever before — seen photos are outstanding, so much so that in 2011 I may extract and frame many of them for my studio walls. On second thought, the calendar as a whole will end up in my archives; I promise no scissors will ever touch it. Also extremely cool and drool-worthy are the Moog Modular images in the background. Well done! I can hardly wait for the 2011 edition." -- Mark Vail
Update: In case you attempted to purchase a 2010 Bob Moog Foundation Calendar and were unable to, the calendar is now available for purchase on the Bob Moog Foundation online store.
That's an instrument?

"Yup. The one with the wires. And this was only the beginning. It was huge, ancient and sounded glorious."
Moogerfoogers
PREVIOUS PAGE
NEXT PAGE
HOME
© 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













© 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