via this auction
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
1976 Moog Minimoog Model D SN 7293
Note: links to listings are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction
"Original owners manual included. Original purchaser claims they bought the instrument in 1971 although the interior factory inspection dates would indicate an assembly date of January 1976. Super nice all original in perfect working condition. We see no modifications or repairs. All parts are correct and original. Maple cabinet is very nice with attractive with original walnut stain. Two keys stick up, typical of these, not bad only two. Fantastic rich sounding, all keys work all functions work. A great very clean and all original example of a very desirable Mini Moog perfect for live or recording."

via this auction
"Original owners manual included. Original purchaser claims they bought the instrument in 1971 although the interior factory inspection dates would indicate an assembly date of January 1976. Super nice all original in perfect working condition. We see no modifications or repairs. All parts are correct and original. Maple cabinet is very nice with attractive with original walnut stain. Two keys stick up, typical of these, not bad only two. Fantastic rich sounding, all keys work all functions work. A great very clean and all original example of a very desirable Mini Moog perfect for live or recording."
CIRCUIT BENT Humadorian VCO sequencer
Note: links to listings are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction
video posted earlier here.
"Long after all the stogies were smoked, this box was left purposeless and alone.
So I took it upon myself to give it purpose once more.
Now the box contains no smokables but instead it houses a fine selection of noise-making circuitry.
Here's a list of the features:
8 dials to control the VCO pitch, each with 8 pure green LEDs to show which step is being played.
1 dial to control the Master Clock speed with a blue LED to show it's rate.
1 pause button to stop the sequence in it's tracks.
1 dial to add a slight squelch to the VCO.
2 dials each with their own 2-way switch for further modulation.
Clock-in and clock-thru jack sockets for external clock control.
CV-out socket & intensity dial for driving other instruments with green LED(this function is a little on the ropey side).
Line-out for amplification purposes.
Built in speaker for some-on-the-fly noise terrorism.
9v battery holder on the back of the box.
DC power socket for a 9 - 12v center-negative power supply.
Chunky power switch and pilot lamp power indicator LED.
Awesomeness."
via this auction
video posted earlier here.
"Long after all the stogies were smoked, this box was left purposeless and alone.
So I took it upon myself to give it purpose once more.
Now the box contains no smokables but instead it houses a fine selection of noise-making circuitry.
Here's a list of the features:
8 dials to control the VCO pitch, each with 8 pure green LEDs to show which step is being played.
1 dial to control the Master Clock speed with a blue LED to show it's rate.
1 pause button to stop the sequence in it's tracks.
1 dial to add a slight squelch to the VCO.
2 dials each with their own 2-way switch for further modulation.
Clock-in and clock-thru jack sockets for external clock control.
CV-out socket & intensity dial for driving other instruments with green LED(this function is a little on the ropey side).
Line-out for amplification purposes.
Built in speaker for some-on-the-fly noise terrorism.
9v battery holder on the back of the box.
DC power socket for a 9 - 12v center-negative power supply.
Chunky power switch and pilot lamp power indicator LED.
Awesomeness."
Universal Roland EV-5 Compatible MIDI Joystick Controller - VG-99 GR-300 Analog Synth Demo
YouTube Published on Jun 19, 2012 by WayneJoness
"The "X" axis (up and down) controls filter cutoff on a Roland VG-99 model of the legendary Roland GR-300. The "Y" axis controls resonance.
By moving the Joystick up and down, filter cutoff changes. Left-to-right motion changes the amount of resonance."
Alesis Andromeda Code Emulation Jam
Alesis Andromeda Code Emulation Jam by CoolColJ
"More SE Code 8 emulation with the Andromeda"
"More SE Code 8 emulation with the Andromeda"
Delay ay ay ay ay ay...
Delay ay ay ay ay ay... by mutable.instruments
"Note: since this is a breadboard prototype with very poor grounding, there is an unusually high noise floor (the digital hash you can hear when the filter is closed). Bear with it, a large part of it will go away on a properly routed board."
"Note: since this is a breadboard prototype with very poor grounding, there is an unusually high noise floor (the digital hash you can hear when the filter is closed). Bear with it, a large part of it will go away on a properly routed board."
DSI Dave Smith Instruments Evolver Keyboard
YouTube Published on Jun 19, 2012 by JampyKey
"Audio from camera microphone"
Some sound exploration on the evolver.
synthroteck Passive Ring Modulator

via synthrotek
"This little case is only 2.83″ x 2.08″ x .93″ and it will fit in your pocket. This ring mod is now the perfect size to slide it in your instrument case, and take it along to a show or band practice. The input is on the right, the carrier is in the center, and output is on the left. Decals for the case are coming soon!"
"Two input signals are multiplied together and the resulting output is the sum and difference of the frequencies of each. The germanium diode ring provides the effect with a minimum of signal distortion while the transformers segregate your audio sources for the internal circuitry. The circuit requires no external power supply!Measuring 2 9/16″ x 1 3/16″, the Passive Ring Modulator PCB is a compact, high quality circuit board manufactured by Imagineering out of Elk Grove Village, IL. The layout is a custom design by our resident electronics engineer, Steven S. The PCB allows for the transformers and diodes to be soldered directly to the board neatly and a ground plane helps reduce interference from external noise and RF."
East-German Spring Tank Test

East-German Spring Tank Test by Banyek
"Finally, my custom built spring reverb is ready. (thanks much to Csaba Füle, the best)
Basically it is an RFT spring tank driven by a Doepfer A-199 module. Much bigger space, much wider spectrum, much better than Accutronics imho.
Audio: It's a basic sequence with the Vermona DRM-1 put on multi channels sent to the Spring Reverb.
Changing Emphasis and Feedback here and there on the Doepfer A-199 module, changing the filter on the snare at the solo, and finally, slapping the rack hard in the end. :)
It's just wonderful. Everyone should forget vst reverbs - for a while at least. This thing sounds so unpredictable, so different every time, so alive... I have done some phased and hi-lowpassed feedback and send-return business too, really shouldn't waste words trying to describe those sounds..."
via Hargitai András on The MATRIXSYNTH Lounge
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MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH
© 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























