Thank you for watching. My name is Meska of the statik collective . I've been making mostly 'dark and expérimental' music for more than ten years now, i'v learn so much online, now it's time for me to share my knoledge, my exploration and this channel is a place to talk about the tools, sound design and techniques to make music with.
"The RMIF Opus (РМИФ Oпус) is a rare analogue string machine/synthesizer made in Riga, Latvia by the Riga Musical Instrument Factory (RMIF) in the year 1988.
The sound range is five octaves and the instrument consists of 4 sections — piano, that synthesizes piano like lead soundings of different timbres, analog string machine, that plays wonderful string sounds with soft attack and with the possibility to control release, tremolo and the pereodically repeated beat-fading sounds.
A flexible bass section, that is controlled by 2 lower octaves, that contain three 8' and two 16' registers.
The Opus is based on divide-down technology with a master oscillator and has very nice multimode filter (LPF, BPF and HPF with resonance), a fantastic chorus, ring modulator, vibrato and a lot other features."
"The Roland MKS-7 Super Quartet is a multitimbral rack-mounted synthesizer, combining sounds from the iconic Juno-106 in four separate sections: Bass, Melody, Chord, and Rhythm.
Each section is independently programmable, making it a versatile tool for creating complete arrangements. With classic analog sounds, MIDI control, and robust build quality, the MKS-7 is perfect for vintage synth enthusiasts and studio setups."
"FREEZE YOUR OCHD // EXPLORE THE FROZEN TUNDRAS OF DISRUPTED LFOs // BASK IN THE GREATNESS OF HOLDING UP TO 24 VOLTAGES ...
Silliness aside here's a video all about freezing your ochd, which is something I highlighted as a feature back in the original ochd release video. It continues to be something I really enjoy and I think it's maybe a bit of a missed trick so here we are highlighting it! Add some negative voltages to the CV control, freeze the outputs of ochd and the expander and enjoy the held sustained tones in your patches before letting run free again."