MATRIXSYNTH


Monday, February 04, 2013

MATRIXSYNTH NAMM 2013: Buchla Booth Pics

Some pics from the Buchla booth.  Click on them for the super size shots.   Note the first two are from my Canon Rebel T2i and the rest are from my iPhone 4S as the battery on the Canon ran out.

Featured at the booth were the 200e system and of course the new Buchla Music Easel, The Electric Music Box.  The design of the Music Box is essentially the same as the original, and will actually come with a reprint of the original manual pictured below.  The last image in this post is of Don Buchla, the man himself.

I had a little hands on with the new Easel and lets just say out of every synth I tried at NAMM this year, this is the one that made me feel the most like a little kid in a candy shop.  It brought back that sense of childlike wonder you rarely get when you've become extremely familiar with most forms of synthesis.   For those of you not familiar with the Buchla paradigm, although there is overlap with traditional subtractive synthesis, the approach is different.   Buchla's systems invite you to explore sound in a way that you might not on standard OSC to Mixer to Filter designs.  Instead of attempting to re-create specific and often somewhat predictable sounds,  these systems are more like electronic sound labs.  This might sound silly, and I mentioned it to Don, but his systems remind me of what you might have thought synthesizers were when you were a child or when you were first introduced to synthesis - magical boxes that allow you to morph and explore sound rather than a keyboard that emulates known instruments.

The more you become familiar with the standard building blocks of synthesis (oscillators, filters, envelopes, LFOs) the more predictable it becomes. The focus tends to be more about creating or targeting a specific sound and then playing notes with that sound.  Not so much on a Buchla. Yes you can play tonal music on a Buchla, but for me, and definitely on the Music Easel, the experience was more about exploring the entire system and the manipulation of sound over time.  Yes you can approach other feature rich synths in the same way, but the Buchla just leads you there.   This is why people that love Buchla are willing to shell out more for them. If you are curious about why that is, I encourage you to check out the Buchla website, and of course the Buchla label below to see what others are doing with their systems.  Keep an open mind.  Buchlas are all about synthesis and the manipulation of sound.  They were originally designed for the composers of Musique Concrete.


MATRIXSYNTH NAMM 2013: John Bowen Solaris Booth Pics & New Editor


Some pics of the Solaris at the John Bowen Synth Design booth.  See a screenshot of the upcoming software editor below.  This is one powerful synth, and you could argue the most powerful and flexible digital synthesizer to date.   It has a number of unique features not found on other synths including "Rotors" which are special 4-step waveshape sequences which act as oscillators. You can select any four sound sources, cycle through them in a Rotar and create a new complex sound source. Via the John Bowen website: "We all know that an oscillator basically takes a waveshape and cycles it continuously. The more complex the waveshape used, the more interesting the resulting cycles will sound. Now select four sound sources (including the external inputs and all the oscillator types mentioned previously) and play these repeatedly in a looped sequence one after the other. This is what a rotor is and Solaris has two of these as additional sound sources that can then be further mixed, filtered and modulated. Still can't imagine what a rotor sounds like? Check out this example: WeirdRotor1Poly"

The Solaris has four oscillators per voice. Along with standard waveforms, you have the Prophet VS waveforms, and wavetables from Waldorf available. There really is too much to cover in this post. If you haven't already I encourage you to check out John Bowen Synth Design for the full feature set, demos and testimonials.  And of course also see the John Bowen label below.

John gave me a sneak peak at a software editor for the Solaris.  You'll see a screenshot of the Arpeggiator editor below.

MATRIXSYNTH NAMM 2013: Carson & Peter Perform at the DSI Booth Video

Uploaded on Feb 4, 2013 matrixsynth·261 videos

Not the best audio in this video but I thought the performance was pretty cool and I wanted to capture it so here it is.  Carson on the Tempest and Peter on the Prophet 12.  You can see the Bob Moog Foundation booth in the background.  See this post for my DSI booth pics.  I opted to put this video up separately as I'm putting my NAMM posts up in the order I visited each booth.  This video was captured on my second visit.

http://www.davesmithinstruments.com

MATRIXSYNTH NAMM 2013: Antiquity Music Booth Pics


Some pics of the Antiquity Music booth featuring two versions of the Wheelharp, one with standard flat piano keys and one with circular keys.  Note this is not a synthesizer or electronic instrument. It's a bowed string instrument that you play with keys. "The Wheelharp is a groundbreaking keyboard musical instrument that gives the player the ability to orchestrate a full chromatic scale of sixty-one (61) actual bowed strings at one’s own fingertips, almost like having a real chamber string orchestra at hand."

See the Antiquity Music label below for more posts including video and audio demos.

ARP Odyssey + Oberheim OB-Xa "Games"


Published on Feb 4, 2013 retrosound72·220 videos

"(c) 2012 vintage synthesizer demo track by RetroSound
'Games'

bass and sequencer sounds: ARP Odyssey Mk III Analog Synthesizer from the year 1980, sequenced by the SCI Pro-One internal step sequencer
all other sounds: Oberheim OB-Xa Analog Synthesizer from the year 1981
drums: Roland TR-707
recording: multi-track without midi
fx: a little bit delay and reverb"

clip random control - ARP 2500, Moog Modular, RSF, EMS Synthi & More - Video

Published on Feb 4, 2013 Olivier Briand·3 videos

"Pendant l'enregistrement de "Random Control" en Février 2009, dans le studio d'Olivier Grall.....
Le CD est enfin disponible en Février 2013 sur le site www.pwm-distrib.com !"

via Olivier Briand on The MATRIXSYNTH Lounge

Akai MPC3000 Sampler Synthesizer Sequencer SN 49525-01284

Note: links to listings are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"WITH BONUS EXTRAS:
1x APS External SCSI drive
1x SCSI Cable
2x External Iomega Zip Drive
1x Zonet 4 port VGA splitter

Synth Specifications
Polyphony - 32 Notes
Sampler - 16-bit, 44.1kHz, Stereo
Memory - 2MB RAM (22 seconds) to 32 MB
Filter - Lowpass filter with resonance and envelope
Sounds - 24 Drum sets and 4 Pad Banks
Arpeg/Seq - Sequencer: 20 songs, 99 sequences, 99 tracks, 75,000 note capacity
Keyboard - 16 soft pads (w/ velocity & aftertouch)
Control - MIDI, MTC, SMPTE
Date Produced - 1994"

WASP British Analog Vintage Synthesizer

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via this auction

Korg Mini Pops 35 Vintage Drum Machine SN 780907

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via this auction

Vintage Jen P-700 Pedal Bass Synthesizer Video

Note: links to listings are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
Published on Feb 4, 2013 9timetravelers·22 videos


via this auction

"Essentially they are a simple analogue synthesizer producing powerful, analogue bass. You can select 8 foot and 16 foot tones independently with foot switches. This means you can use them on their own or together. You can also select sustain and control the decay time. This sustain feature is great for guitarists or live keyboard playing. You can also adjust the bass tone, volume and tuning.
Manufactured In Italy by Jen Elletronica."

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