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Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Fender Rhodes CHROMA POLARIS SN 300785
Roland JX-10 Analog Synthesizer
Behringer Teases a New Oberheim TVS?
Note the knob placement compared to the TVS below and the patch panel on the right. This appears to be a TVS in Neutron form factor.
Note the extra switch under the filter Notch knob missing on the original. This implies the variable filter from Bandpass to Lowpass to Highpass will be able to be modulated.
Multi language text-to-wavetable
Matt Tytel
"Added non-english languages to the text-to-wavetable in Vital.
Also doubles as a way to have english but with a foreign accent."
You can find additional posts featuring Vital here.
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
LABELS/MORE: Soft Synths, Vital, Vocal Synthesis
LABELS/MORE: Soft Synths, Vital, Vocal Synthesis
TG55 (first run) - Mid 70's Top Gear TG 55 "Synthesiser" from England
Rafmax Fx
Super rare guitar synth from England's Top Gear. Only two have been featured on the site before. This appears to be the first demo of one.
From a previous post:
"The TG55 Synthesizer, made by Top Gear England. More of a processer similar to the Synthi Hi Fi, but more powerful. Sporting 4 tracking oscilators, insanely good fuzz and a matrix of processing loops. 24 Chicken head knobs!"
Corona Vocoder
Corona Vocoder
"Freestyle impro Feat. Vintage Electro Harmonix Vocoder and Roland SVC-350 Vocoder"
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
LABELS/MORE: EHX, Guitar Synths, Roland
LABELS/MORE: EHX, Guitar Synths, Roland
Corona Hifli
Corona Hifli
"Freestyle impro Feat. the mighty vintage EMS Synti HiFli"
A/DA Harmony Synthesizer demo
Rafmax Fx
YAMAHA TG33 - Relaxing ambient chillout music | Synth demo
synth4ever
"This relaxing ambient chill-out / new age synthesizer music created using Yamaha TG33 vector synthesis, random arpeggiator, and Yamaha TG-33 reverb effects. The Yamaha TG33 is a great synthesizer for ambient music."
TINRS Fenix IV - Case Microphone Patch explained
Making Sound Machines
"This patch we made last night uses the tiny microphone built into This is Not Rocket Science's Fenix IV to play the brilliant digital oscillator, resulting in this chill kalimba soundscape.
The case mic is routed to the Fenix' external input module, which allows you to extract a gate and an envelope from the audio. This gate clocks the Fenix' sequencer and advances the sequence by one step each time Enrica taps the case - sending new pitch CV to the digital oscillator in FM mode, and triggering two ADSR controlling two VCA.
The result is mixed with the case mic's original signal - not only do the bamboo end cheeks look and feel absolutely great, they also make a lovely sound - and fed into the stereo digital delay. We absolutely love this sound, somewhere between Stockhausen Kontakte, our own experiments with Mutable Instruments Ears and Music Thing Modular's Mikrohonie piezo eurorack modules, chimes, tonguedrum and glockenspiel, and the lovely skits on Danny Breaks records.
Thank you Stijn, Priscilla and Lauri at TiNRS for the lovely surprises you built into this machine! ❤️ So much to discover!"
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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




























