"This Juno 6 is in excellent (near mint!) cosmetic condition (some small rust marks). It has just been cleaned, serviced and checked. A classic 6 voice DCO analog synthesizer combining the stability of Digitally controlled oscillators and analog warmth making this synthesizer a pleasure to use and create sounds on."
"This is a demonstration of the new Synthetic Sound Labs 1310 Digital Delay module. The device is capable of subtle doubling, hard timed delays and super flanging. I mostly am using it as a gentle flanger in this demo but it is far more powerful than what I demo here. You can get one for your 5U MU modular synthesizer by checking out the website at http://www.steamsynth.com/
I also finished a project where I was modifying a stock Q111 Pan/Fade module from Synthesizers.com. I added an attenuator pot to the control input and added an inverter circuit to the output #2. This enables the Panning portion of the module to output audio to two channels of my mixer in stereo. I have control over how wide the panning is and both output channels are normal (un-inverted) so there is no cancellation when sending to effects etc..
I am using several other delay units as well in this demo. TC Electronics D-Two is way in the background so it isn't really a factor. Strymon 's Blue Sky Reverberator is the heavy plate reverb in the background. The Korg Kaoss 3 pad is used to have some looping fun, but I tried to keep it low level so not to interfere with the demo of the 1310 delay module.
There are four separate voices playing in this piece from the modular. The sequencers are generating various time signatures and loops but all of the distorted flanging effect is the 1310 Digital Delay. This is one fun unit and a great addition to my modular synth.
The title is about the amount of time since I got serious about building a modular synth to work with. It has been a little over two years (9 seasons) since I made the commitment. No looking back and I am very happy with the move away from dedicated keyboards and soft synths (although I still use them for other things).
Thanks to Doug Slocum at Synthetic Sound Labs for the great delay module. He has other ideas in the works and I am very excited about the future of his endeavor."
"The synth features patches of classic analog keyboard sounds, which are user editable. The Vintage Keys Plus requires a standard IEC lead, which comes supplied with the unit. The Vintage Keys Plus also features MIDI in/out/through connections, which are located on the rear panel, along with Left and Right outputs for the main, sub 1 and sub2 outputs. The unit can be run mono by using the main right output. All ouptuts on the rear are standard 1/4" Mono jack sockets. The front panel features a recessed on/off power switch, a jogwheel for scrolling through patches, cursor left and right buttons, a home/enter button, a master button and an edit button, 1/4" stereo jack headphone socket and a master volume knob."
flickr set by Create Digital Media (click for more)
"MeeBlip Quick Build Kit, fully assembled
MeeBlip is a new digital MIDI mono synthesizer designed by James Grahame [RetroThing]. It’s designed to be affordable, hackable, and most of all, playable. It’s an open source hardware instrument, but it isn’t just for hackers. You can unpack it, do some very basic assembly of the complete kit, and be making sounds from a MIDI keyboard or other controller within minutes.
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