MATRIXSYNTH


Monday, May 02, 2011

Roland TB-303 Devil Fish in a red aluminium case


via this auction

more pics at the auction

"Serial #158, Version v.2.1D I bought this Devilfish from a guy in Germany sometime in the Spring of 2004 and shortly thereafter, I managed to persuade Martin Rothlisberger from Switzerland to custom make me one of his amazing machined anodised aluminium cases! As you’ll see from the various pics below, it is custom machined with this TBs serial number on the back. It took A LOT of persuading to get this case! For the past few years Martin has not been making any more cases. I did get an email recently from him where he suggested he was making more, but they won’t look like this because Martin no longer has access to a 4D capable CNC machine. So basically it’s no longer possible to have that lovely slanting area by the tactile pushbuttons, which also means no ‘TB-303’ lettering can be engraved there.

The fitment of the TB-303’s delicate electronic innards into the case is a very tricky affair, they are carved from solid blocks of aluminium by a computer, and thus super accurate; the problem lies in the TB itself, which hailing from the 80’s is not so accurate. Some of the potentiometer positions can subtly vary, and there are other pitfalls, for example the wires can get pinched in different places. Thankfully Robin Whittle himself took on the task of fitting the electronics into the case! Subsequently, this TB has been fitted to the highest standards possible.

OTT ? You bet!:
Robin strikes me as the classic genius engineer and in implementing the modification, I guess his priority is in making sure everything works, not necessarily whether it looks beautiful. When I got the machine back, there were a few (admittedly) minor things that I wasn’t so happy with; things like knobs scraping against the case metalwork and LED’s not being quite high enough to poke through the case metalwork. I have a lot of experience doing fiddly solder work, thus went about putting things right myself. Amidst this endeavour, I installed 2 by 2 carbon fibre washers (I had a specialist firm make them to my specifications), the latest sealed tactile switches (from Analogue Renaissance – see this link), an even larger capacity lithium battery than the one Robin uses as stock for the bank memory back up and the rear of the case attaches via precision machined titanium bolts. It’s a functioning piece of design / art.

Obsessive? Um, yeah… probably :-)
I was actually really obsessive… Unhappy with the use of cut pieces of leather to increase the height for the set of the six uppermost knobs, I acquired some super expensive 3mm PTFE sheet and machined my own knob shaft inserts from it. Plus rather than use Blutack to ‘glue’ the knobs on to the shafts, I used what plumbers do – a small piece of flexible PTFE tape which works really beautifully for this purpose. Perhaps most practically, I have implemented a delightfully simple but important idea that buffers the main PCB board, in the event that the machine ever falls face flat, which due to the design by Roland, does leave the machine quite susceptible to a cracked PCB. Some of the ideas I have shared with Robin (to his interest!), others I have not as yet, but I suspect he and other TB enthusiasts would find them interesting, if not a touch obsessive :-)

I almost forgot – WHITE LED’s!
It is worth me mentioning that along with the ‘works’ fee to have the TB-303 fitted into the alu case, Robin charged me separately for fitting some special LEDs to this machine. With great care, I had tracked down some lovely diffused white LED’s. Most white LED’s are hyperbright and not diffused, these were, but were still a touch too bright and so Robin had to reengineer the TB-303 drive electronics to power them correctly. I feel this was really worth it though, the white on red looks absolutely stunning in pictures and more so in person."


Beat707 Delay Circuit

via Jeremy Abel on Facebook:

"delay circuit from my soon-to-be-done Beat707 sequencer"

See the Beat707 label below for more including video.

Buchla Dual Oscillator Model 258v & Kilpatrick K4816 Pattern Generator



via anonymous

Analogue Solutions Telemark Semi Modular Synthesizer

via this auction

Water Based Touch Controller?

RAW CAMERA 1 (ion quincy jones tribute performance) from Ion on Vimeo.

"An unexpected kiss at elevation 636 (preliminary mix)" - STG and Andrew Crook vs STL 2011


YouTube Uploaded by suitandtieguy on May 2, 2011

"This is a preview of the new album I'm almost finished with called Jefferson County Blues. It's a bit of a travelogue of a trip Andrew and I made to St Louis to see Sound Tribe Sector 9. The track is a preliminary mix of a track off of my new album.

It was a very dark and stormy night as we lead into STL. So stormy that we actually avoided a group of tornadoes which ripped through northern STL. Some of the damage of which is depicted in this video.

Andrew Crook was the man with camera most of the way through. He is Minister of Cultural References and Director of Photography for STG Soundlabs."

Update: the gear:
"Bass: modular (2 Q106 -> Sea Devils Filter -> Signal Amplifiers) into Eventide H3000SE
Nasal pad/lead: Fizmo arpeggio
Arp xylophone type sound: modular (Mankato -> Wave Folder -> Signal Amplifiers) into Lexicon PCM-80
Drums: TR-808"

Minimalismisticness jam op1


YouTube Uploaded by shuchoco on May 1, 2011

"playing with the teenage engineering op1

used:
DIGITAL Synth Engine.
ENDLESS Sequencer.
DELAY.
VALUE LFO assigned to DIGITAL Synth parameter.


sorry about the vertical orientation... it dumb iphone... me dumb user..."

Hanimi Sakura Spectrum


YouTube Uploaded by RADIOKLOW on May 1, 2011

"Small Composition for electronics, dedicated to the Japanese People."

Hanimi Sakura Color

Uploaded by RADIOKLOW on May 1, 2011

"Celebration of the japanese cherry trees pink blossom"

"I am using presets I created on Morphwizz, the I Pad instrument conceived by Jordan Rudess."

Jordan Rudess: Wizdom Music, LLC
iPads on eBay
iPod Touch on eBay

Jean-Michel Jarre in Studio


via Marcel

Click the image for some synth spotting.

Update: see the comments in this post. This one is photoshopped. That is not JMJ's studio.

Biscuit man

via NewT Tron's Photos
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