MATRIXSYNTH

Friday, November 30, 2018

Brother GX-151 Auto Emillion 70s Vintage Analog Synthesizer / Drum Machine

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

via this auction

"Brother Auto Emillion Gx-151 70's Vintage Analog Synthesizer with Drum Machine - This unit has some scratches and paint chippings, but fully operational and functional in pretty good condition. We have maintained this unit, tested all keys, switches, knobs, in / outputs works perfectly."

You can find a couple of demos of the Brother GX-151 in the archives.

Technosaurus Microcon Analog Synthesizer and Cyclodon Sequencer

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

via this auction

"Incredibly rare original editions of the Technosaurus Microcon (1997) analog synthesizer and Cyclodon (1998) step sequencer. A powerful combination. They sound amazing together. Ultra analog, with discrete circuitry.
Made in Switzerland.

The Cyclodon is in excellent condition, with very little wear. The Cyclodon shows signs of wear, as some of the lettering on the faceplate has rubbed off, as shown in photos.
Both the Microcon (original Mark I) and Cyclocon are extremely hard to find now."

SN 2121 & 2254

Korg EX-800 SN 004819

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


via this auction

Oberheim OBX Rev 1 Analog 8 Voice Synthesizer Pro Serviced SN 793312

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


via this auction

Follow-up to this post. New pics added.

"Originally a 6-voice (per original sticker), all 8 voice cards (visible in pic) are functional, and pass auto-tune. This is Collector's grade appearance wise, and completely stock--no MODS, no ugly drill holes, etc.

You will not see a 100% fully functional Rev 1.0 in such pristine condition, possibly ever! Pro-serviced in 2017 by master tech Greg Montalbano of Analog Synth Service (Oakland, CA). Service included full calibration."

Korg MS-20 SN 141576 with Carry Handle

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

via this auction

This one was featured back in 2012.

A Random Ambient Soundscape // Polyend-Dreadbox Medusa + Ventris Dual Reverb


Published on Nov 30, 2018 Genshi Media Group

"::| WARNING! HIGH FREQUENCIES AHEAD. CAUTION ADVISED |::

Again, just exploring the Polyend/Dreadbox Medusa with this random ambient sci-fi soundscape. Using all 6 Oscillators (with Wavetables on the Digital Oscillators) there is a ton of subtle modulation going on at almost every step of the sequence. The Medusa is paired up here with the Strymon El Capistan dTape Echo and the Source Audio Ventris Dual Reverb."

Todd Barton on BBC Sounds + Multum in Parvo Release


Excerpts of Todd Barton's performance at the Unsound Festival in Krakow is up on BBC Sounds.

"A rebroadcast of excerpts from my performance of Music and Poetry of the Kesh at the Unsound Festival in Krakow last month with a wonderful ensemble of Polish musicians. Here's the link which will be active for a month.

And the first excerpt on the broadcast is from my new solo Buchla Music Easel album, Multum in Parvo with cover art by Ursula Barton! [embed below]

Much more to come in 2019! Gigs in Belgium, NYC and Santa Barbara. New Album releases too.

Happy Holidays!
Best wishes,
Todd"




"If you’re anything like me, then one of your favourite albums of 2018 was Music and Poetry of The Kesh, released on the Freedom To Spend label. Recorded over two years in the mid-1980s, Music and Poetry of The Kesh in truth was never really designed as an ‘album’ as such. It was a cassette bundled with early editions of the legendary author Ursula K. Le Guin’s Always Coming Home novel.

The novel described the art, culture, language and ethnography of a fictional tribe of indigenous inhabitants of North California, 500 years from now. On the tape, Le Guin and her friend and collaborator, composer and sound artist Todd Barton, created a detailed, vivid musical identity for these people - the Kesh.

Listened to in 2018, the sounds of Music and Poetry of The Kesh feel simultaneously ancient and futuristic. Todd designed and built new instruments to realise the Kesh’s music, which were woven among synthesisers and field recordings from the Kesh’s native Napa Valley.

It’s a stunning, singular piece of work, but the story doesn’t end there. Anyone intrigued by Music and Poetry of the Kesh would be well advised to dig further into Todd Barton’s work, starting with Multum in Parvo - a brand new piece Todd composed using the Epoch Modular Benjolin and Buchla Music Easel.

“Don Buchla created a musical instrument that he said had no ‘preconceived ideas,’” Todd recently told the Listen to This website. “He wanted people to figure out how they wanted to interface with it. You see that with Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith, Alessandro Cortini—they’re bringing their own voice to the palette. For my part, I’m obsessed with sound, with the ‘Buchla Paradigm.’

“His approach to synthesis, which was so different from Moog on the East coast, is immediately evident to anyone who has ever touched a Buchla instrument. If you listen to a Buchla, it will start rewiring your synapses.”

Todd honed his craft composing for acoustic instruments - string quartets, small ensembles and orchestras. In the 1970s he was drawn to emergent synthesiser technologies because of their abilities to access tones ‘between’ the standard 12 notes of the Western musical scale, and to have the power to craft music out of glitches and unique sonic gestures that are unplayable on acoustic instruments.

Multum in Parvo is reflective of this approach - it has a definite and logical flow as a composition, but its content is abstract sound sculpted out of pure energy, something only analogue synthesis can offer.

Sometimes sparse, sometimes bristling and jumping with detail, Multum... provides a genuinely multidimensional experience. Listen to it in the dark on your best headphones, you experience your brain moving slowly through a black space where an orchestra of strange, electro-microorganisms seem to swarm, murmurate and disperse, adding their distinct flutters, whispers and calls to an immersive electronic symphony.

Like the classic Forbidden Planet soundtrack, which Todd was inspired by, or indeed Music and Poetry of the Kesh - Multum in Parvo seems to function as part of some unique sonic ecology, according to its own rules, in its own universe and somewhere just beyond time.

Multum in Parvo is available on CD with artwork by the artist Ursula Barton - Todd’s daughter, named after his great friend and collaborator. It is also available on cassette with Blue Tapes artwork as ‘blue twenty-eight’.

Praise for Todd Barton:

"Multum In Parvo creates a very real imaginary place, and then it weaves that imaginary place into exactly where you are right now. I’ve listened to Multum In Parvo a dozen times or more and I’ve never heard the same album twice, because I change and my mood changes but also because incidental noises in my body and my surroundings – from sighs to car horns to distant giggles – all seem to be on very friendly terms with Todd Barton and his Buchla." - The Quietus

“Listen outdoors and the creek water you hear in Le Guin and Barton’s songs may sync up to the muddy river you’re passing; listen during a city’s winter and the percussive rhythm and bell-like tones will commune with your apartment radiator. These are sounds that seek to speak from then and beyond, to right now.” - Pitchfork
credits
released October 5, 2018

Improvised soundscapes by Todd Barton
on the Buchla Music Easel and Epoch Hordijk Benjolin

Cover art by Ursula Barton (ursulabarton.com)"

Bass Station 2 - Paraphonic Ringmod Jam


Published on Nov 28, 2018 Synthmaniac

"Here I'm exploring the new paraphonic mode that came with the 2.5 update. I set all the knobs to the correct positions so that the patch is comprehensible.
Oscillator settings:
Osc 1 (low notes): 8' sawtooth
Osc 2 (high notes): 4' triangle
Noise is set to 19
I added some delay, otherwise no eq, compression, fx..."

And some clangy filter sounds from a year ago:

Bass Station II - filter mod fun

Published on Feb 8, 2017 Synthmaniac

ALM MCO & Quaid Megaslope Modules


Published on Nov 30, 2018 Perfect Circuit

"ALM's MCO is a digital wavetable VCO with 10 waveforms inspired by 90s hybrid synths which hard harsh aliasing oscillators. We rand the MCO through the MUM M8 filter. The Quaid Megaslope is a powerful function generator based on the function generators from the Casio CZ series of keyboards. It can be an envelope, LFO or sequencer with control over timing, shape and level for each stage. Dinky's and Akemie's Taiko create the drums and the Malekko Varigate 8+ is sequencing everything.

MCO available here: https://www.perfectcircuit.com/alm-bu...

Quaid available here: https://www.perfectcircuit.com/alm-bu...

#PerfectCircuit #Eurorack #Synth"

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Supporters of MATRIXSYNTH get %10 off at Perfect Circuit!

XILS-lab Updates XILS 4 Matrix Modular Soft Synth to v1.5


The press release:

XILS-lab updates ultimate matrix modular soft synth with welcomed fanciful features added to XILS 4 v1.5

“My favourite analogue synth is probably the VCS3, so when I heard that a company was releasing a software version I was quite cautious; today, XILS 4 is one of my favourite plug-ins! Working with it gives me the same excitement as the original hardware, plus there are lots of extra features, since it is basically two VCS3s with an interconnected sequencer. The sound is great, and it is one of the best soft synths on the market for experimenting with new ways of creating sounds!”

- Jean-Michel Jarre (award-winning composer, performer, and record producer), April 2015


GRENOBLE, FRANCE: audio software company XILS-lab is proud to announce availability of XILS 4 v1.5 — a major update to its self-styled ultimate matrix modular soft synth, effectively emulating a conceptual ‘blend’ of the legendary VCS4, a ‘dual VCS3’ analogue matrix modular synthesizer prototyped by British trailblazing entity EMS (Electronic Music Studios) back in 1969 but never commercially released, with pioneering British synthesist Tim Blake’s so-called ‘Crystal Machine’ (comprising two EMS Synthi AKS analogue matrix modular synthesizers with hard sync between their oscillators, one connected to the keyboard and the other connected to the sequencer) — with welcomed additional fanciful features including a powerful preset manager in a single window and new effects with semi-modular routing, as of November 30…

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