via this auction
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Sequential Circuits Prophet-600 Vintage Synthesizer SN 3947
SCI Sequential Circuits TOM with 32K Expansion
Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction
"SCI Sequential Circuits TOM drum machine with rare RAM expansion to 32K (std is only 8K) so it can store a boatload of tracks - with original power supply... This thing rocks , 8 basic sounds with 8 more on the expansion cartridge - All sounds can be pitched with 32 steps and reversed - see the description at vintagesynth dot com - here is an excerpt"
via this auction
"SCI Sequential Circuits TOM drum machine with rare RAM expansion to 32K (std is only 8K) so it can store a boatload of tracks - with original power supply... This thing rocks , 8 basic sounds with 8 more on the expansion cartridge - All sounds can be pitched with 32 steps and reversed - see the description at vintagesynth dot com - here is an excerpt"
RMS No.10 - A Simple Sequence Using 'Pamela's Workout' and a Mixer
RMS No.10 - A Simple Sequence Using 'Pamela's Workout' and a Mixer from Random Modular Snippets on Vimeo.
"Featuring:- ALM - Pamela's Workout, Doepfer's A-110, A-138, A-140 and a touch of the Strymon El Capistan.
This is just a very simple sequence created by using Pamela's Workout and a mixer. With added ADSR and a touch of vibrato via an LFO.
If I'd thought on I would have just sent the source from the oscillator straight to the output and used the other mixer and the other Pamela's Workout outs for more action on the other oscillator."
Amanda Ghassaei Electronic Instrument
Published on May 25, 2012 InstructablesTV·146 videos
via Instructables

via MAKE
Dubspot First Look: The Propellerhead PX7 FM Synthesizer
Dubspot First Look: The Propellerhead PX7 FM Synthesizer In Reason 6.5 w/ Chris Petti
Published on Jan 10, 2013 DubSpot·387 videos
Pic of the massive Jellinghaus DX7 hardware knob laden editor at :53.
More info: http://bit.ly/X3rh1F
"Recently Propellerhead approached me about designing some sounds for a new FM synthesizer in Reason. As you may recall from some of my previous video tutorials, I showed you how to create an FM synth out of several Thors and a Combinator. The purpose was to demonstrate how to get some of the more modern, edgy FM sounds that we associate with dubstep and electro.
Although my method for creating FM sounds this way worked, Propellerhead have made this easier now with a new FM synthesizer engine, the PX7, now available as a Rack Extension for Reason 6.5. The PX7 is a true six-operator FM synth with some dazzling math behind it, resulting in a replica of the Yamaha DX7, the first commercially available FM synth from the early 1980s.
Just so you all know, the DX7 and I didn't have a great relationship when we first met. I first encountered it in the labs at Berklee when I was studying music synthesis. It was a million miles away from what I wanted to achieve soundwise. I was very into the big, fat, warm analog sounds that I was hearing in all the drum'n'bass tunes I was into at the time. The DX7 was also difficult to program at first. It didn't make sense to me and was really tedious. It had a very small display that required you to scroll through dozens upon dozens of parameters to create and edit a sound. More importantly to me at the time, it was seemingly not capable of producing the analog sounds I was into.
Years later, after a revival in software form, FM synthesis has found a very special place in my heart. I now find it to be very exciting as I am now very clear on what I can and can't do with it. I have developed an appreciation for the highly detailed and exotic sounds that FM can produce. So I hope you all enjoy and appreciate the irony of this situation and my love/hate relationship with FM throughout the years. Most importantly, I hope that you enjoy the lesson in the PX7 and ultimately FM synthesis. - Chris Petti"
Published on Jan 10, 2013 DubSpot·387 videos
Pic of the massive Jellinghaus DX7 hardware knob laden editor at :53.
More info: http://bit.ly/X3rh1F
"Recently Propellerhead approached me about designing some sounds for a new FM synthesizer in Reason. As you may recall from some of my previous video tutorials, I showed you how to create an FM synth out of several Thors and a Combinator. The purpose was to demonstrate how to get some of the more modern, edgy FM sounds that we associate with dubstep and electro.
Although my method for creating FM sounds this way worked, Propellerhead have made this easier now with a new FM synthesizer engine, the PX7, now available as a Rack Extension for Reason 6.5. The PX7 is a true six-operator FM synth with some dazzling math behind it, resulting in a replica of the Yamaha DX7, the first commercially available FM synth from the early 1980s.
Just so you all know, the DX7 and I didn't have a great relationship when we first met. I first encountered it in the labs at Berklee when I was studying music synthesis. It was a million miles away from what I wanted to achieve soundwise. I was very into the big, fat, warm analog sounds that I was hearing in all the drum'n'bass tunes I was into at the time. The DX7 was also difficult to program at first. It didn't make sense to me and was really tedious. It had a very small display that required you to scroll through dozens upon dozens of parameters to create and edit a sound. More importantly to me at the time, it was seemingly not capable of producing the analog sounds I was into.
Years later, after a revival in software form, FM synthesis has found a very special place in my heart. I now find it to be very exciting as I am now very clear on what I can and can't do with it. I have developed an appreciation for the highly detailed and exotic sounds that FM can produce. So I hope you all enjoy and appreciate the irony of this situation and my love/hate relationship with FM throughout the years. Most importantly, I hope that you enjoy the lesson in the PX7 and ultimately FM synthesis. - Chris Petti"
RC CIRCUIT BENT ALCHEMIST ANALOGUE DRONE LAB SYNTHESIZER
Published on Jan 10, 2013 djwidow420·216 videos
"MODIFIED 1979 SOUND GENERATOR - ANALOGUE DRONE MACHINE"
Resonance Circuits on eBay (RSS)
"MODIFIED 1979 SOUND GENERATOR - ANALOGUE DRONE MACHINE"
Resonance Circuits on eBay (RSS)
Glitchbreaks Hotel
Published on Jan 10, 2013 Alex Matheu·11 videos
"Recorded this session of Glitchbreaks playing over Animoog into Multitrack DAW on Audiobus in my hotel room."
iTunes:
GlitchBreaks - Alex Matheu
Animoog - Moog Music Inc.
iOS Devices on eBay - Daily Tech Deals
"Recorded this session of Glitchbreaks playing over Animoog into Multitrack DAW on Audiobus in my hotel room."
iTunes:
GlitchBreaks - Alex Matheu
Animoog - Moog Music Inc.
iOS Devices on eBay - Daily Tech Deals
monstrumWave - demo of wavetable and waveform editing
Published on Jan 10, 2013 msepsis·14 videos
No audio. Just a demo of the UI. monstrumWave is an editor for Waldorf Microwave II, XT and XTk synthesizers. You can find a demo with audio on MATRIXSYNTH-P here.
"Demonstration of the current nightly monstrumwave beta,2.796.
You can now retrieve, edit and store back to user presets on the synth wavetable and waveform data. Still working out some bugs, but as you can see the core is there.
I sell this editor at www.monstrummedia.com, the functionality demo'd here is not in the current release but will be sent out to all current customers when the monstrumWave 3.0 update comes."
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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