Thursday, March 17, 2011
PAiA Stringz n Thingz - Circuit Bent Analog String Synth
YouTube Uploaded by SynthesizerDemos on Feb 27, 2011
"This is the PAiA Stringz n Thingz. It was released in the late 70's as a diy kit and proved so popular that it became one of the few products PAiA manufactured in fully completed form!
This one has been modified by Karl Ekdahl, of KNAS Music, who builds the Moisturizer.
http://www.knasmusic.com"
Yamaha CS01 Analog Monosynth Keytar
YouTube Uploaded by SynthesizerDemos on Jul 5, 2010
"The CS01 is an analog synthesizer produced by Yamaha in the early 80's. It has a single VCO that can do triangle waves, square wares, sawtooth waves and pulse waves, and with pulse width modulation, you can really fatten up that VCO.
It can run on batteries and has strap pegs so it can easily be used as a keytar. It even has a built in speaker. But it sounds much better when run through an amp.
It even has an input for a breath controller, which can control the VCF and/or the VCA."
Yamaha CS01 Analog Monosynth Keytar Part 2
Yamaha RX15 and TX81z Demo (12-Bit Blues)
YouTube Uploaded by SynthesizerDemos on Jun 19, 2010
"Here is a demo of the Yamaha RX15 drum machine and the TX-18z Tone Generator. The RX15 is a 12-bit drum machine produced in the mid-80's and the TX-81z is a 4 operator, 8-part multitimbral FM Module produced in the late 80's.
This is a little 12-bar blues jam I recorded on my midi recorder earlier in the day. I wanted to do the solo live, but my usb interface doesn't have midi-thru, so I just recorded everything to the sequencer first.
All the drums are coming from the RX15 and everything else is coming from the TX81z. Plus there's a little reverb from the amp.
The Bass is the infamous "Lately Bass" preset, the Rhodes is the fantastic "New Electro" preset. The lead is just a slightly modified sawtooth I programmed."
Vintage DK Synergy Synthesizer software
"**In order to use this software you will need a vintage Kaypro computer (Kaypro 1, 2, II, 2x, 4, 4x, and 10) and a working Synergy II or Synergy II+. You can tell a Synergy II from a first generation Synergy because a Synergy II has a 25 pin serial port on the back of it.** If you own a DK Synergy II or plan on owning a Synergy II then this is an essential purchase.
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© 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