Monday, December 19, 2016
Making a Preset live on the Arturia MatrixBrute
Published on Dec 19, 2016 Flux302 of Fluxwithit.com
"Making a patch from scratch with no previous set up, no editing. the MatrixBrute is capable of such a wide variety of sound, I will upload a series of these 'Live matchmaking' videos to give an idea of its different use cases.
*Please if you would like to support more videos like these consider purchasing a product over at shop.fluxwithit.com."
Korg VC-10 Vocoder SN 160469 with Original Case
Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction
"The Korg VC-10 is a polyphonic 20 band vocoder. You can feed your voice or any type of sound into this unit and use its parameters to synthesize it. You can use the parameters to blend in the sound you feed and also add functions such as vibrato to modulate it. Very easy and effective piece of unit with very cool sounds."
via this auction
"The Korg VC-10 is a polyphonic 20 band vocoder. You can feed your voice or any type of sound into this unit and use its parameters to synthesize it. You can use the parameters to blend in the sound you feed and also add functions such as vibrato to modulate it. Very easy and effective piece of unit with very cool sounds."
Roland TB-303
Simmons SDS-V Analog Drum Synthesizer
Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.
via this auction
"1982 SIMMONS SDS V synthesizer drum brain (no pads included)
Includes snare, kick and 2 tom modules. One tom modules buttons stick a little bit, other than that the brain works perfectly. Missing one knob due to a broken post but will include an original replacement knob with cap. The case has a little damage in the corner, but nothing that will impair use."
via this auction
"1982 SIMMONS SDS V synthesizer drum brain (no pads included)
Includes snare, kick and 2 tom modules. One tom modules buttons stick a little bit, other than that the brain works perfectly. Missing one knob due to a broken post but will include an original replacement knob with cap. The case has a little damage in the corner, but nothing that will impair use."
07-The Yamaha CS-15: Part 7- Portamento and Glide
Published on Dec 19, 2016 AutomaticGainsay
"Here is a demonstration of the sound and functionality of the portamento and unique "glide" functions of the Yamaha CS-15.
http://www.patreon.com/automaticgainsay"
All parts here.
Moog Opus 3 Synthesizer Overview
Published on Dec 19, 2016 ProckGnosis
"WARNING: yet another LENGTHY, "for synth geeks" focused vid (see menu below to select other parts of the video). Also another sort-of retro review (like the Yamaha CS-5 overview), this time with the Moog Opus 3, an underrated polyphonic/paraphonic Moog synth from the early 80's. Great for the 70's "string machine" style chorus sounds and some punchy, synthy sounds running through that 24dB Moog filter. Though the synth is a bit limited in capability, it makes up for it in the "how it sounds" department.
00:00 Intro
03:12 The Strings Section
08:08 The Organ Section
12:00 The Brass Section
16:35 Modulation and Running the Organ thru Filter and Chorus
25:05 The Articulator (VCA) and the Output Mix
And just in case it wasn't clear the couple times I mentioned it in the video, the reworked ProckGnosis opening theme was done entirely with the Moog Opus 3 and some Reason drums."
Roland TB03 Bass Line
Published on Dec 19, 2016 3rdStoreyChemist
"Messing around with a TB03 synthesiser.
No further processing used except for normalisation."
Adventures in Synthesis: Glitchy Shift Register Feedback
Published on Dec 19, 2016 Chris Beckstrom
"I'm finishing up a techno album at the moment (which we be available for free at chrisbeckstrom.bandcamp.com soon!), and thought it would be refreshing to make some nonrhythmic music with my modular. This is a patch that some might not even consider music- and that's ok. We can agree to disagree.
These glitchy, distorted blips and beeps are a pretty good aural expression of how I feel about 2016.
PATCH NOTES
This patch is based on a bunch of feedback: things modulating other things modulating other things which eventually find their way back and modulate the first thing. When I try to do this on the computer I end up crashing everything. With analog circuits there is nothing to crash: it sounds awesome.
The pitch of an oscillator is modulated by the output of an R/2R resistor ladder, which is receiving gate signals from a 4-step shift register. The shift register is clocked by a square oscillator. The input of the shift register- the thing that gets it going, so to speak- is the output of a clock divider which is listening to the triangle wave coming out of the original oscillator. (It's not really a triangle wave- it's more of a rounded square wave, so the clock divider has no trouble spitting out divisions.) In this way there is a feedback loop: the oscillator speed is controlling its own rate of modulation! This accounts for the periods of silence or relative stasis. A few times throughout the video I make the oscillator go faster, which in turn modulates itself more, causing more activity. Turning the big oscillator knob to the left slows everything down.
Two wave outputs of the main oscillator- square and triangle- are routed into three inputs of a sequential switch. The third input to this sequential switch is the output of a saw wave oscillator. This saw wave oscillator's pitch is modulated by a 10 step sequencer, which in turn is clocked by the pulse output of the main oscillator. The sequential switch is clocked by another divided output of the main oscillator, again causing a feedback loop. The fourth input to the switch is the output of a module I call "space noise," which is really just a bunch of square wave oscillators making clicking sounds. I often use it for random modulation at slower rates; at faster rates, it's just noisy clicking.
As the sequential switch steps through each of its four channels, we're basically hearing each input in order: first the "space noise" clicking, then the main square wave oscillator, then the saw wave, then finally the triangle from the main oscillator. When the sequential switch is clocked slowly, we can hear each wave as if we were muting and unmuting four channels on a mixer in order. At fast speeds (audio rates) we hear the four outputs as a single wave. This phenomenon- things sounding completely different depending how quickly we hear them- never ceases to amaze and entertain me.
Finally, the saw oscillator (step three in the sequential switch) is being modulated by another 10 step sequencer, which is in turn clocked with yet another square wave oscillator. The clock divider which is clocking the sequential switch is receiving reset messages (gates) from the "space noise" module, which causes the clock division to become a bit random and glitchy.
The mono output of the modular goes into a mixer and some of the modular is sent to a vintage (90's!) Alesis Microverb II digital reverb, which is brought back into the mixer on two channels for some nice stereo. I like the combination of gritty analog sounds and gritty digital reverb. The Microverb came from a church, and I can guarantee they never put anything like these sounds through it."
Elastic Drums 2nd birthday update 1.9.5
Published on Dec 19, 2016 Oliver Greschke
iTunes: Elastic Drums - O-G-SUS
"Elastic Drums Version 1.9.5 comes with new presets and some bugfixes and improvements. Additionally there is now a sample kit available via InAppPurchase by German sound designer Matthias Sauer aka App Sound, that offers a broad variety of sounds (170 samples), usable for all kind of music styles. See a video about the sample kit here: https://youtu.be/Cz9X_pntbFs"
App Sound Sample Pack for Elastic Drums
Published on Dec 16, 2016
"A collection with 170 new samples (acoustic + electronics drums, fx + chords) and 12 presets for iOS Elastic Drums. Get this sample pack via In-App-Purchase."
SHOWTIME - Tiergrinder (Ensoniq EPS , Jupiter Clone, Roland GAIA)
Published on Dec 19, 2016 tiergrinder
'Gear used :
Synth Hit - Ensoniq EPS (DX7 Clav Sample)
FX Melody - Ensoniq EPS (DX7 Sitar Sample)
Bass line - Korg Polysix VST
Intro Theme - Roland SH-01 Gaia
Synth Lead - Roland SH-01 Gaia
White noise swoosh - Roland SH-01 Gaia
Arpeggio line - Jupiter Clone
Bended Synth - Jupiter Clone
Poly chords - Jupiter Clone
Toms - Simmons SDSV samples
Kick and Snare - TR-707 (Compressed, EQ'd and layered)
Hihats - Alesis HR-16 samples"
PREVIOUS PAGE
NEXT PAGE
HOME
© 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













© 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