Monday, May 26, 2014
ARP AXXE Anafrog DEMO Moog Filter 2311
Published on May 19, 2012 Stanislas Landois·18 videos
"Little Demo from the ARP 2311 AXXE
The VCF is modulated by a VCO ( Z3000 Tiptop Audio ) via Pedal Input"
Sequential Circuits Six Trak Demo Video
Published on Apr 26, 2012 Stanislas Landois·18 videos
"sort of demo from my beloved Sequential Circuits Six Trak.
this is more to show what this synth can do than an audio track."
SCI Sequential Circuits Split Eight Split 8 Video Demos
Uploaded on Nov 19, 2011 Stanislas Landois·18 videos
"Some Patches I've done with my cool and rare Sequential Circuits Split-8 Very nice synth.
With a bit of delay from Eventide Time Factor..
Very warm sounds and nice effects"
SCI Sequential Circuits Split Eight split 8 Part 2 Analog Synth rare
MFB 301 Old Analog rythm drum machine
Uploaded on Nov 17, 2010 Stanislas Landois·18 videos
Left channel audio.
"MFB 301 Analog Rythm Drum Machine
maybe the first prototype ?
With some cool adds like 4 triggers for sounds and a cool stereo audio out switch"
Korg Maxikorg 800DV audio demo Maxi Korg 800 DV analog synth
Published on Apr 8, 2012 Stanislas Landois·18 videos
"a one shot video ( sorry for bad picture ) about my new fully restored Maxikorg 800DV
enjoy"
Amazing Scope Suite for Reaktor
Published on May 22, 2014 AmazingMachines·4 videos
"Amazing Scope Suite for Reaktor, a bundle of 3 unique Reaktor Ensembles that will change the way you see Waveforms in your DAW. With unparalleled features such as Freezed Waveform Navigation, Tempo Synced Triggering and MIDI Triggering, the Amazing Scope Suite brings the Oscilloscope to your DAW, an Essential Tool that has been available in Professional Studios for more than 40 years.
For more information, please visit:
http://www.amazingmachines.com.br/"
And the press release:
"Amazing Machines Intros the Amazing Scope Suite for Reaktor:
A bundle of 3 unique Reaktor Ensembles that will change the way you see Waveforms in your DAW.
With unparalleled features such as Freezed Waveform Navigation, Tempo Synced Triggering and
MIDI Triggering, the Amazing Scope Suite brings the Oscilloscope to your DAW, an Essential Tool
that has been available in Professional Studios for more than 40 years!
Features:
- 3 Reaktor Ensembles
- 4 Display Modes
- 8 Triggering Modes, including Tempo Synced Triggering and MIDI Triggering
- 2 Knob Resolution Modes
- A/B Switch for Multiple Settings
- Input Signal Delay
- Freeze Switch
- Freezed Waveform Navigation
- Total control over the X and Y Axis on the Main Display
Compatibility:
Native Instruments' Reaktor 5.8 or newer
Product Page:
http://www.amazingmachines.com.br/products_amazing_scope_suite.html
Pricing and Availability:
$29.99 USD directly from the Amazing Machines Web Store
http://www.amazingmachines.com.br/store.html"
Hoy Crap! GUITORGAN Analog Guitar Synth SN 1444
Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction (yes it is "Hoy")
See the MCI channel label below for more.
via the seller: "Oh sweet mother of pearl! It's the Guitorgan. Here's the skinny:
What the 'ef is it? It's a late 60s or early 70s guitar/organ. Each fret is segmented, so the "brain" can read each note and make organ-like sounds, which really sound more like cheesy synth patches. It's also a regular guitar, and the footpedal/power supply thingy has an output for organ and straight guitar built right in along with a volume pedal. The guitar itself also has a regular 1/4" guitar out.
Where the 'ef did it come from? As I understand it, the Guitorgan company was in business a long time, mostly kept afloat by the inventor himself. The guitar itself seems to me to be some kind of Norma or similar Japanese guitar. The knobs, hardware, pickups, tuners, all scream Norma/Grecco and other imported guitars of that period.
What the 'ef does it sound like? Well…..it's actually not as bad as you'd think. Listening to the strait organ sound, you get a miniature forrest of switches to change the pitch, tone, waveform, add vibrato etc. But overall, it sounds for all the world like a cheese ball Lowery organ. What's cool about it is mixing that tone back in with the regular guitar sound. Then it starts actually sounding good.
What's even more interesting is that it if you slide or bend a string, you misstrigger the fret/switch, and that adds some random weirdness to what you are playing. So if you get all geeky and take the regular guitar sound and distort it, then mix it with the vibrating organ sound, you actually get something pretty huge and unique. A guy who puts a lot of time into using both sounds with a lot of pedals is likely to make some really special sounds with this. Add to that the idea that there's no reason the guitar has to be in tune with the organ since it's triggered off the frets. Tune every string a 5th out and you've got something crazy sounding.
I should also point out that you can also play this thing with one hand because the organ doesn't rely on the right hand strumming or plucking. So you can hold a full chord and the organ sound will play while you pick individual notes. Try it with Stairway to Heaven and you'll dig it. Also note the button by the nut: you can hit that and it triggers another chord, so you can play it open I suppose. I'm not really sure what that button and the button on the pick guard are supposed to do.
Condition: this Guitorgan is complete and appears to be working great. The cable is good, the foot pedal is good, the case is original. The guitar is played but I find no major flaws on it.
Playability: the action is fairly high on this guitar, and I think it has 11s on it right now. But it plays fine, though I think it would benefit from new and lighter strings. The guitar itself is HEAVY because of all the electronics."
via this auction (yes it is "Hoy")
See the MCI channel label below for more.

What the 'ef is it? It's a late 60s or early 70s guitar/organ. Each fret is segmented, so the "brain" can read each note and make organ-like sounds, which really sound more like cheesy synth patches. It's also a regular guitar, and the footpedal/power supply thingy has an output for organ and straight guitar built right in along with a volume pedal. The guitar itself also has a regular 1/4" guitar out.
Where the 'ef did it come from? As I understand it, the Guitorgan company was in business a long time, mostly kept afloat by the inventor himself. The guitar itself seems to me to be some kind of Norma or similar Japanese guitar. The knobs, hardware, pickups, tuners, all scream Norma/Grecco and other imported guitars of that period.
What the 'ef does it sound like? Well…..it's actually not as bad as you'd think. Listening to the strait organ sound, you get a miniature forrest of switches to change the pitch, tone, waveform, add vibrato etc. But overall, it sounds for all the world like a cheese ball Lowery organ. What's cool about it is mixing that tone back in with the regular guitar sound. Then it starts actually sounding good.
What's even more interesting is that it if you slide or bend a string, you misstrigger the fret/switch, and that adds some random weirdness to what you are playing. So if you get all geeky and take the regular guitar sound and distort it, then mix it with the vibrating organ sound, you actually get something pretty huge and unique. A guy who puts a lot of time into using both sounds with a lot of pedals is likely to make some really special sounds with this. Add to that the idea that there's no reason the guitar has to be in tune with the organ since it's triggered off the frets. Tune every string a 5th out and you've got something crazy sounding.
I should also point out that you can also play this thing with one hand because the organ doesn't rely on the right hand strumming or plucking. So you can hold a full chord and the organ sound will play while you pick individual notes. Try it with Stairway to Heaven and you'll dig it. Also note the button by the nut: you can hit that and it triggers another chord, so you can play it open I suppose. I'm not really sure what that button and the button on the pick guard are supposed to do.
Condition: this Guitorgan is complete and appears to be working great. The cable is good, the foot pedal is good, the case is original. The guitar is played but I find no major flaws on it.
Playability: the action is fairly high on this guitar, and I think it has 11s on it right now. But it plays fine, though I think it would benefit from new and lighter strings. The guitar itself is HEAVY because of all the electronics."
Roland TR-808 Rhythm Composer Analog Drum Machine
ROLAND TR-909 ANALOG DRUM MACHINE
Roland TR-606 Drumatix Analog Drum Machine + Original Box + Case + Card
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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