MATRIXSYNTH


Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Golden Master Harmonic Ratio Arpeggiator

via Golden Master

"I’ve gone on another microtonal trip lately, and have been working with ratios again. The thing about composing music with frequency ratios is that it places you in a brave new world where each interval is made up of TWO numbers instead of one (as in the traditional system, a fourth, third, fifth, etc). There are also all kinds of undiscovered tones and frequencies and relationships. There has to be a way to explore all this!"

nin.com news 2.9.10: ?



via Trent Reznor on the nin.com forum

Note the Doepfer Schaltwerk sequencer on top of the original design Vermona DRM1 in the top shot. Below note the LL Electronics Oddulator.

Update via Big City Music in the comments: "There's a Flight of Harmony Infernal Noise Machine in the top shot too:).
-Josh"

Update: I originally posted the Vermona in the top shot as a Perfourmer. kernelslacker caught it and let me know it was actually the DRM-1.

The gift of music

flickr by 33six



Date With The Night

flickr by Rawm!

1 156.avi


YouTube via mikeonop

The Making Of ELECTROLUMINESCENCE


YouTube via theraywilsonshow

"ELECTROLUMINESCENCE is the first CD I have offered featuring my MFOS modular synthesizer and the ULTIMATE semi-modular synthesizer. Some of these pieces are original minimalistic ambient sound-scapes to think by and others are complete musical works by classical composers. I think of these as aural landscapes or bath salts for your ears. I believe they will help you meditate, relax and unwind. They are also handy for noisy work spaces where they can help you stay focused and avoid the distraction that comes with indirectly hearing other conversations, phone calls, P.A. systems, etc. They are popular at the Parker Recreation center (Parker, CO) and are used in yoga classes and Thai massage therapy sessions. Thought you might enjoy a little inside look at making the CD."

Folktek - Modified Omnichord by Ben Houston


YouTube via benpumpkin. Folktek on Ebay
"Folktek - Modified Omnichord by Ben Houston (http://folktek.blogspot.com). Video by Big Pauper (http://tokenrecluse.com)."

Custom 5 Octave KORG MS20/MS10

ELP - Karn Evil 9 - recreating the 'end bit' with Korg gear.

YouTube via noddyspuncture

"Here's my go at recreating the end bit on ELP's Karn Evil 9 ... I used audio line-in this time. Korg SQ-10 sequencer playing my custom (5 octave) MS-20/10 bolt-together jobby. I don't have a video camera so I used my digital stills camera - into an old VHS machine and then played that back and 'video captured' it into my PC using VirtualDub.... phew! Wires everywhere...;c)"

M-Z3R0 - circuit bent Yamaha DD-5 glitch sequencer


YouTube via manufacturedZ3R0
"Pitch control, 16 switch glitch matrix & 8 step sequencer which frees it of it's presets.
It has a midi out port which sends data from the pads and the sequencer to external devices. Towards the end of this run i use it to trigger a kick drum on the mpc500.

One of the more awkward dd's to get to respond well to the glitching. But with a bit of practice some cool loops can be made. Slowing down, reversing and drastic alteration of the all out glitching it throws out in a sample editor also yields some great sounding results.

It sounds in many ways similar to a modified TR505 slumming it with an 8 step diy sequencer."

An Interview with Drew from CRUDBUMP


You might remember Drew from a number of posts here on MATRIXSYNTH. He has a new release out called CRUDBUMP. Considering how much he has contributed to the site I asked him to send me a shot of some of his gear for a post. This in turn resulted in the following interview. Enjoy.

1. So, for those not familiar with your work, give us a little background on some of what you do?

"I write and illustrate two daily comics, Toothpaste For Dinner and Married To The Sea, which are free to view online. Musically speaking, I wrote & recorded four comedy-industrial albums as Kompressor from 2000-04 and released some miscellaneous music under the Dog Traders name from 2000-08. I occasionally make short Youtube videos, with my music as the soundtrack."

2. How did you get into synths?

"Took classical piano lessons for eight years as a child, started playing guitar, and while in college (1998) I started poking around and realized synthesizers were pretty inexpensive. I'd read music magazines here and there as a kid and always assumed they were thousands of dollars, but once I got on eBay, I found people getting rid of old Rolands, multitrack tape machines, etc. and jumped right in.

Since the market for analog synths hadn't blown up yet, I assembled a small studio of an Ensoniq SQ-80, Roland JX-8p / SH-09 / 707, some guitar pedals, and a Tascam Porta-01 for hardly anything, and started recording music.

Once I had a couple synths, I started to scour local thrift stores/music stores/garage sales for neglected, broken, cheap gear which I'd clean/fix up and either keep or resell. By the time I started Kompressor in 2000, I'd added an Optigan, Rheem Kee bass, Akai S612, Tascam 238 and a gang of cheap midi synths / fx boxes."

3. When you first started picking up synths, what did you look for in them?

"I figured out pretty quickly that I liked synths with a lot of knobs and inputs/outputs way more than synths with one data wheel and a bunch of menus. You can get a huge range of sounds out of the SH-09 by patching feedback out of the headphone jack through guitar pedals and back into the input, and using the envelope follower + filter to process drums and bass/guitar."

4. What was your first synth and what is currently your favorite?

"My first actual synth (not counting a Casiotone) was a Roland JX-8p... if the modular doesn't count as my favorite I'd have to go with the SH-2/SH-09. Owned both of them, currenly just have the SH-2, but it makes its way onto everything. I've always wanted to check out an SH-5 or SH-7 but they've gotten so crazy expensive over the years that I don't think I'll ever get the chance. If I trip over one in the trash while I'm taking a walk some day I'll let you know what I think."

5. When playing your synths, do you focus on composing music, exploring sound, both, or other?

"Probably a mixture of both. The MPC has been instrumental in letting me control the modular + effects - I record a lot of sounds from the modular and cut them up/re-sequence them in the MPC. Most of the time I don't have a keyboard hooked up to the modular, but I do use a Futureretro Orb that's clocked by the MPC for sequencing.

A lot of the melodic stuff is from the Roland SH-2 and Waldorf Q+, which I usually play live instead of sequencing. There's something about the bender and key action on the SH-2 which I love and wish Roland would make again."


6. What interests you now in the world of synths?

"The 5U format of modular synths, which includes Modcan, MOTM, Synthesizers.com, and a few small manufacturers, has a great form factor and is built extremely well. The manufacturers in this format seem to concentrate on sound quality and build quality rather than making little Nintendo Fart-Monster modules with cheap components, which seems to dominate the Eurorack format. I know that Euro users love their Eurorack, and I actually have a Doepfer "beauty box" for some modules I can't get in 5U - but I built up about 15U of Euro in 08/09 and was really disappointed in the sound + physical aspects. Probably spoiled from the 5U stuff I'd been using for years! I sold it off and got some Modcan/MOTM stuff instead.

The newer Modcan modules are novel and I'm going to pick up some of those as they become available. I just got the 65B Dual Frequency Shifter last fall as I was finishing up the CRUDBUMP album and it wound up on half the tracks, since it sounds good on almost anything. Frequency shifter modules are touchy since you need either great DSP or precisely-calibrated analog multipliers to eliminate bleed, but this one was very well-designed. It responds well to CV and even sounds good if you overdrive it a little bit."

7. What are your thoughts on the iPad and upcoming slate devices in relation to synthesis?

"I have no idea (sorry!) [matrix: enough said. :)]"


8. Finally, can you tell us a little bit about your latest release?

"It's a spoken-word/rap album called CRUDBUMP:NA$TYJAM$ and it's stuffed completely full of analog-synth sounds and vocoder. The songs are about subprime lending, a fictional city called Horsetown, leaving voicemail for the governor of Ohio, traveling to England, and bare feet. It has a lot of bass so it bumps if you play it in your car. That's where I imagine you would want to listen to the album. It's a good album to play if you're trying to get yourself pumped up to go to work."

BTW, if you are wondering who the pug is, his name is Charles. Check him out here and be sure to see Drew's Toothpaste For Dinner and Married To The Sea. It's all good.
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