Published on Jan 1, 2013
"A New Year - 2013, a new piece of kit and its first output ;-) A very simple composition (and maybe slightly naff) for a first offering !!"
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Teenage Engineering OP-1 Demos by Krog360
Published on Mar 8, 2013 Krog360·46 videos
Remember you can forward to the next video via the controls on the bottom of the player.
Playlist:
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - Grey
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - B-Side
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - Stifled
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - Paris 98'
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - Submarine
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - Windy
Teenage Engineering OP-1 - Propulsion
10th Anniversary Minimoog Voyager Has Left the Factory

via Moog Music on Facebook
"10th Anniversary Minimoog Voyager has left the factory & is on the road to the winner with a few Moog employees in tow. Gift of a Lifetime.
Follow Moog on Instagram: @moogmusic"
iTenori Sync Jam (Slim Phatty / Standuino / MPC 500 / Tenori-On iOS App / etc.)
Published on Mar 12, 2013 flx04·37 videos
http://www.standuino.eu/
"Synced my MPC 500 to the Tenori-On iOS app and sequenced some stuff. Questions or comments? Go ahead and post them below! :) Thanks for watching! MORE INFO: V V V V
Gear used in this video:
Standuino frauAngelico drum machine (through the Kaosspad Mini) - www.standuino.eu,
Standuino fraAngelico digital synthesizer (through the Korg Monotron filter and Earthquaker Devices Rainbow Machine),
Moog Slim Phatty (Bass),
Kurzweil MicroPiano (E-Piano),
Akai MPC500 (additional drums),
Korg Kaosspad Quad (FX),
The Standuino synths are MIDI-Sequenced with the Tenori-On TNi iPad app and the rest by the Akai MPC500.
Filmed with a GoPro HD Hero and a Canon Rebel t2i (550D)."
DIY Water Based Oscilloscope
Amazing Water & Sound Experiment #2
Published on Mar 11, 2013
"Add me on Facebook. (click LIKE on Facebook to add me)
https://www.facebook.com/158773774166995
Download the song in this video
Song Name: Monolith
iTunes:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/mon...
Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_nos...
Ever since I created the first version of this video a year ago I've been wanting to try it again with more water and better lighting / footage. This is a really fun project and when you first see the results, chances are your jaw will drop. The main thing to keep in mind for this project is that you need a camera that shoots 24 fps.
The effect that you are seeing can't be seen with the naked eye. The effect only works through the camera. However, there is a version of the project you can do where the effect would be visible with the naked eye. For that project, you'd have to use a strobe light.
For this project you'll need:
A powered speaker
Water source
Soft rubber hose
Tone generating software
24 fps camera
Tape.
Run the rubber hose down past the speaker so that the hose touches the speaker. Leave about 1 or 2 inches of the hose hanging past the bottom of the speaker. Secure the hose to the speaker with tape or whatever works best for you. The goal is to make sure the hose is touching the actual speaker so that when the speaker produces sound (vibrates) it will vibrate the hose.
Set up your camera and switch it to 24 fps. The higher the shutter speed the better the results. But also keep in the mind that the higher your shutter speed, the more light you need. Run an audio cable from your computer to the speaker. Set your tone generating software to 24hz and hit play.Turn on the water. Now look through the camera and watch the magic begin. If you want the water to look like it's moving backward set the
frequency to 23hz. If you want to look like it's moving forward in slow motion set it to 25hz.
Have fun!"
via Boing Boing
Published on Mar 11, 2013
"Add me on Facebook. (click LIKE on Facebook to add me)
https://www.facebook.com/158773774166995
Download the song in this video
Song Name: Monolith
iTunes:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/mon...
Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_nos...
Ever since I created the first version of this video a year ago I've been wanting to try it again with more water and better lighting / footage. This is a really fun project and when you first see the results, chances are your jaw will drop. The main thing to keep in mind for this project is that you need a camera that shoots 24 fps.
The effect that you are seeing can't be seen with the naked eye. The effect only works through the camera. However, there is a version of the project you can do where the effect would be visible with the naked eye. For that project, you'd have to use a strobe light.
For this project you'll need:
A powered speaker
Water source
Soft rubber hose
Tone generating software
24 fps camera
Tape.
Run the rubber hose down past the speaker so that the hose touches the speaker. Leave about 1 or 2 inches of the hose hanging past the bottom of the speaker. Secure the hose to the speaker with tape or whatever works best for you. The goal is to make sure the hose is touching the actual speaker so that when the speaker produces sound (vibrates) it will vibrate the hose.
Set up your camera and switch it to 24 fps. The higher the shutter speed the better the results. But also keep in the mind that the higher your shutter speed, the more light you need. Run an audio cable from your computer to the speaker. Set your tone generating software to 24hz and hit play.Turn on the water. Now look through the camera and watch the magic begin. If you want the water to look like it's moving backward set the
frequency to 23hz. If you want to look like it's moving forward in slow motion set it to 25hz.
Have fun!"
via Boing Boing
YAMAHA SY 2
Kenton MODULAR SOLO High Specification Eurorack MIDI to CV converter
Note: links to listings are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction
analoglsd (RSS)
"The Modular Solo is supplied complete with ribbon cable ready to fit into any Eurorack (A100) format modular system.
Power is supplied by the power supply in the modular case via the backplane
Power consumption +12V supply 85mA max / −12V supply 3mA
+5v supply is not required (needs +/−12V only)
CV & Gate signals can be sent via the ribbon cable to the system bus - selected using jumpers
MIDI In & Out on DIN sockets (MIDI Out can be switched to give DIN Sync 24 instead)
Analogue output CV on 3.5mm mono jack (V/oct or Hz/V or 1.2V/oct)
Gate on 3.5mm mono jack (Gate or S-trig – with or without pullups)
Aux1,2,3,4 on 3.5mm mono jack (all continuously variable)
2x independent clock outs on 3.5mm mono jack
Weight 170g
Dimensions 128mm high x 50mm wide x 80mm deep
D to A conversion for main CV 16 bit high quality / low drift DAC
Non-volatile memory EEPROM (no back-up battery required)
Processor 32 bit ARM processor
Designed to control all types of mono-synth
Super-fast response time
Famous Kenton build quality
High specification 16 bit D/A converter for main CV for rock-steady pitches
CV/Gate/Aux/Clock outputs on 3.5mm mono jack sockets (3.5mm to 1/4" cables are available in our cables section)
CV & Gate signals can be sent via the ribbon cable to the system bus - selected using jumpers
MIDI IN socket (5 pin DIN)
MIDI OUT/THRU (5 pin DIN) socket can be switched to become DIN Sync 24 instead
Any MIDI channel can be selected
Switchable for V/oct & Hz/V & 1.2V/oct scaling systems
Fine tune & scale are software controllable
Transpose (coarse tune) - up & down 12 semitones
Adjustable pitchbend range - up to 12 semitones
Programmable Gate V-trig (up to 10V) or S-trig (with or without pull-up)
Multiple and single trigger modes
Note priority selection - newest / lowest / highest
Old notes are remembered to facilitate trill effects and increase playability
via this auctionanaloglsd (RSS)
"The Modular Solo is supplied complete with ribbon cable ready to fit into any Eurorack (A100) format modular system.Power is supplied by the power supply in the modular case via the backplane
Power consumption +12V supply 85mA max / −12V supply 3mA
+5v supply is not required (needs +/−12V only)
CV & Gate signals can be sent via the ribbon cable to the system bus - selected using jumpers
MIDI In & Out on DIN sockets (MIDI Out can be switched to give DIN Sync 24 instead)
Analogue output CV on 3.5mm mono jack (V/oct or Hz/V or 1.2V/oct)
Gate on 3.5mm mono jack (Gate or S-trig – with or without pullups)
Aux1,2,3,4 on 3.5mm mono jack (all continuously variable)
2x independent clock outs on 3.5mm mono jack
Weight 170g
Dimensions 128mm high x 50mm wide x 80mm deep
D to A conversion for main CV 16 bit high quality / low drift DAC
Non-volatile memory EEPROM (no back-up battery required)
Processor 32 bit ARM processor
Designed to control all types of mono-synth
Super-fast response time
Famous Kenton build quality
High specification 16 bit D/A converter for main CV for rock-steady pitches
CV/Gate/Aux/Clock outputs on 3.5mm mono jack sockets (3.5mm to 1/4" cables are available in our cables section)
CV & Gate signals can be sent via the ribbon cable to the system bus - selected using jumpers
MIDI IN socket (5 pin DIN)
MIDI OUT/THRU (5 pin DIN) socket can be switched to become DIN Sync 24 instead
Any MIDI channel can be selected
Switchable for V/oct & Hz/V & 1.2V/oct scaling systems
Fine tune & scale are software controllable
Transpose (coarse tune) - up & down 12 semitones
Adjustable pitchbend range - up to 12 semitones
Programmable Gate V-trig (up to 10V) or S-trig (with or without pull-up)
Multiple and single trigger modes
Note priority selection - newest / lowest / highest
Old notes are remembered to facilitate trill effects and increase playability
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© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
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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



























