MATRIXSYNTH


Tuesday, May 01, 2012

IDOW & MATRIXSYNTH Modular Pic of the Week - Week 26 Contest Winner!

"Our twenty-seventh winner of the Modular Pic of the Week contest goes to Atomic Shadow (photo credit Rod Mitchell), for his 'Lab b/w.'

Atomic Shadow uses a variety of vintage and modern electronic equipment to craft unique sonic sculptures and broadcast them directly from yesterday's world of tomorrow.

For more info on Atomic Shadow, check out his record label's website: http://www.hollowsunrecords.co.uk

We'd like to give a big thanks and congratulations to Atomic Shadow for his submission!

This is the 27th week of a 30-week contest, and we are looking forward to many more modular photo submissions, so please keep 'em coming! For details on how to submit and what you can win, see this post.

For more info on the upcoming 'I Dream of Wires' documentary, be sure to see the trailer and IndieGoGo fund raising campaign here.

See the IDOW label for all posts pertaining to the film including the weekly contest winners."

Disclaimer: If you look closely you might notice something. It looks like a modular system, but there isn't a single traditional module or modular in the shot. The rules of the contest state "- Modular synthesizer hardware only. Semi-modular synth hardware is also acceptable as long as there is evidence of some cross-patching." Great shot aside, why did we opt to put this up? This system consists of sound generators that pre-dated the first modular synthesizers. It gives you a glimpse at what a pre-modular modular system might look like with modern gear. When asked why he submitted this shot when there is clearly no modular in it, Atomic Shadow replied: "I just thought I would send it in because I use it like a modular and it consists of oscillators, filters, and effects that allow me to chop and gate the oscillators and process them in various ways. I have 4 tube driven sine oscillators, one of which also makes a square wave and two solid state sine/square oscillators. By patching them together with various effects and guitar pedals I am able to pitch shift, harmonize and modulate things. The tape machines are my sequencers and the JP8080 mostly gets used as a noise generator.

The rig is similar to any electronic music lab from the 50s, 60s, and 70s. The proto- modular."

For those not familiar with the history of synthesis, before the advent of synthesizers as we know them today, including vintage modulars, people often used tape and oscillators to produce experimental electronic sounds and compositions. These tools led to the creation of the Buchla system, and to some extent the first Moog modular. There is some debate on the original purpose of each, and you may have heard of the East vs. West Coast paradigms on synthesis. In short, the Buchla on the West Coast was highly influenced by Mortin Subotnick who wanted a system to compliment his other tools for more atonal sound generation and exploration typical of musique concrete, while Moog on the East Coast was highly influenced by Herb Deutsch who lead to the use of the traditional keyboard as the interface into producing more tonal music. I recommend the book Analog Days for the history of some of this. There is some debate on the glamorization of the time and some have claimed factual inaccuracies, but it is well worth reading. For a list of more tonal focused electronic instruments throughout history see http://120years.net/. Regarding Buchla and atonal sound generation equipment prior to traditional synthesizers, here's a snip from Wikepedia: "The original Buchla Music Box was the brainchild of Don Buchla and came from a commission by composers Ramon Sender and Morton Subotnick. First built in 1963, this synthesizer was composed of several 'modules' that generated or modified a music event. Each box served a specific function: oscillator, filter, sample and hold, etc. This would have an effect on the pitch, timbre, amplitude and spatial location of the sound. The idea was to allow musicians and composers to create sounds suited to their own specifications. Previously, one had to utilize either discrete audio generators such as test oscillators or via musique concrète, recorded sounds from natural sources. Although it was a fresh and exciting idea and an excellent way to get new sounds, this was very time-consuming and arduous. The Buchla Box allowed musicians to bend and manipulate sound all in one device. This would lead to the many kinds of electronic instruments available today."

Atomic Shadow's system harkens back to these days and incorporates modern day synthesizers with it, all without traditional modular gear. It's a bit fascinating when you think about it.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Korg Monotron Duo Analog Ribbon Synth

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction

A used Korg Monotron Duo. On eBay. In a vice. This might be the first used one I've seen listed. First non glamor shot.

Imageline Wasp | Subtractive Synthesizer Plugin


YouTube Published on Apr 30, 2012 by imageline

"The WASP vsti-dxi is best described as a "broad" analogue emulation synth, which means it can model sounds from a large range of analog synths such as Moog, Roland and others."

Wasp & Wasp XT - http://www.image-line.com/documents/wasp.html

Akai x700 12bit Sampler and Amiga 1200


YouTube Published on Apr 30, 2012 by TheCircuitSymphony

"A quick look at my Akai X700 sampling setup. Using the Amiga 1200computer for SDS MIDI dump. Only the Atari and Amiga could do this as far as I know. X700 was non SDS.... After months of trying to fix my 2.8" quick disk drive I decided to find an alternative to the huge 64k each side disks.........."

Circuit bent experiment


YouTube Published on Apr 28, 2012 by bassling

"Quick demo of a circuit bent La Dictee Magique and the amazing expansion of a Boss Pitchshifter by spunkytoofers called a rabbit hold delay."

spunkytoofers on eBay (RSS)

Rotten notes from the dude-oir (circuit bent experiment part two)


YouTube Published on Apr 30, 2012 by bassling

"Utopia Synth into a Spunkytoofer rabbit hole delay (modified Boss Pitchshifter looped and arranged on a Korg Kaoss Pad 3. Beats from a Korg Wavedrum Mini."

via http://bassling.blogspot.com.au/2012/04/rotten-notes.html

KORG DW-8000 Digital Waveform Synthesizer


YouTube Published on Apr 30, 2012 by retrosound72

"vintage synth demo by RetroSound

KORG DW-8000 Hybrid Synthesizer from the year 1985.

single sound demo

- 8 Voices
- 2 Oscillators per voice
- 16 digital waveforms
- analog lowpass VCF
- analog VCA
- Arpeggiator
- Digital-Delay"

DDDM2


flickr By Meng Qi

"Circuit:PeterB
PCB:MengQi

mengqimusic.com

touch
drone
instrument

12 nodes in the circle would change the sound, while the middle 4 nodes can change the internal patching to completely change how the outer node ring responds.

My pcb design is all self contained with dc and audio jack. Also it allows users to repatch the touch patching system to obtain the exact response they want."

Oberheim DSX

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction

"The DSX has 8 cv/gate outs."

Korg Mono/Poly SN 372377

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction where you'll find a ton more pics while up.

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