YouTube via bebinico | November 07, 2010 - Update: The video is pretty self explanatory, but I added the new English version below. No knobs, no problem. Direct control of your synths with the iPad. USB support with the Camera Connection kit is coming (see this related post). And of course direct iPad to synth via the Line 6 MIDI Mobilizer. You can create your own layouts with this and it's only $2.99. This is pretty amazing when you think about it. The only other option is TouchOSC and OSCulator which runs $19 to $39 depending on how much you want to pay, and they require a computer to run between the iPad and your gear. Note there are obviously some differences between the two, so do your research, but we now have customizable controllers for our synths. Currently the two only support MIDI CC, but Sysex is coming. The iPad will bring new life to cryptic synths. This is going to open up a whole new world in rediscovering menu based synths. I can't wait to unlock the Yamaha FS1R for example.
""S1 MIDI Trigger is the latest version. iPad / iPhone for work as a MIDI controller.
iOS 4.2 support, Camera Connection Kit has become possible connection. (However ※, AppStore, so at the moment is waiting approval, please wait) " Listen"
"Hello ! My name is Frederic Gerchambeau. I have made this movie. The music has been made in one take with Plogue Bidule (sequencers, mixer, solo synth and various delay effects), two Moog FreqBox and a Moog CP-251. Enjoy ! http://www.myspace.com/fredericgercha..."
"Robert A. Moog is the inventor of the practical music synthesizer and president of Big Briar, Inc., a Leicester, North Carolina, firm specializing in the design of custom electronic instruments.
'For some of us, the idea of an electronic muse is scary; after all, music is an essentially human activity, while electronic equipment, especially the computer, is "mechanical" and "unnatural." Throughout history, however, music has been closely linked to technology. Except for the human voice, the instruments of music-making have always been "high tech" in their time...'"
"This german-made TB-303 clone that regularly sells for $1000 if you can find it at all easily creates those squelchy TB-303 sounds so loved by electronica affionados world-over. It is a monophonic bass synth with a midi-clock synchronized sequencer that can easily reproduce the coveted TB-303 in all its glory."