Sunday, November 09, 2008
SSB Syntec Banana
No that is not an Oberheim. This is the SSB Syntec Banana. The image here recently came up on AH and as you can see it is from sequencer.de. The person that posted it was looking for more information on. I dug through all the banana posts and found a post I put back up on October 1, 2006.
You can find more info at the previous post.
Comments disabled here to keep them all there.
I also put the images here.
OBERHEIM 4 VOICE FREESTYLE
YouTube via sonil23
"HAVING A QUICK MESS ABOUT ON MY 4 VOICE, SORRY ABOUT THE LOUD TAPPING ON THE KEYS, MY CAMERA FONE WAS A BIT TOO CLOSE AND THE SPEAKERS WERE QUITE FAR AWAY. AHH WELL! LOL"
The Madnoodle Phone Commerical
YouTube via madnoodler
"Here's a stop animation of the Madnoodler circuit bending a Madnoodle Phone. Music by the Madnoodler, one of his noodle jams. The Madnoodle Phone is available in 3 colors. Order one today."
Navs Patch of the Day - The Polyphonic Modular
"A quick demo of the Kenton Pro 2000 MkII's polyphonic mode.
The most obvious application would be to play chords, but why stop there? The beauty of the modular environment is that you can assign different waveforms, filters and envelope settings to each voice.
In today's patch I used 3 VCOs (panned hard left/ right and centre), a similar number of EGs, VCFs & VCAs and a touch of random modulation to add some movement to what would otherwise be a fairly static riff. The Kenton is in 'Regular Cycle' mode, which means it passes each new note on to the next VCO in the chain."
You can find the patch on navs.modular.lab.
The most obvious application would be to play chords, but why stop there? The beauty of the modular environment is that you can assign different waveforms, filters and envelope settings to each voice.
In today's patch I used 3 VCOs (panned hard left/ right and centre), a similar number of EGs, VCFs & VCAs and a touch of random modulation to add some movement to what would otherwise be a fairly static riff. The Kenton is in 'Regular Cycle' mode, which means it passes each new note on to the next VCO in the chain."
You can find the patch on navs.modular.lab.
Sonic Charge Synplant

You will find that creating synth patches with Synplant will be as easy as listening and deciding what you like and then having the sounds evolve in the directions you desire. Although Synplant is exceedingly easy to use, whatever you do, do not let its relative simplicity fool you. Beneath its straightforward and playful interface you will find a versatile synthesizer of the utmost quality with lots of character. Also, once you are ready to get your hands dirty and dig deeper into the anatomy of Synplant you will have the option to crack open your sound seeds and modify their underlying genetic code."
Update via brian c in the comments:
"I was fortunate to be beta tester over the last couple of months. This is one of my favorites, not just for the interesting user interface but because the sounds are also way better than average IMHO for a soft synth The BEST way to hear it is to go to the Synplant page and click the "Hear It" radio icon. That is a collection of the best of the best beta testers.
They also have a jukebox of SonicCharge products at http://www.soniccharge.com/jukebox?playlist=http://cdn.soniccharge.com/static/sctracks&start=Dirty%20Slip
The stretchy plant interface is really cool, you get over 400 base patches with the product which you can load and then tweek visually until you like the sound and when you've got it where you want it you just "plant" that seed, saving it if you want to keep it. The new seed becomes the base for further evolution. You use your ears to make the patch , not by remembering which dial to tweek. I have to say it's unusual, but it draws you in quicker than think.
You should also download the demo to see the double helix coiled DNA view of patch parameters, it gives access to the patch for those who want to precisely tweek the sound the traditional way, and then you realize it might , i.e. if you are really anal it's all there one parameter at a time.
Now GMO can stand for genetically modified oscillators"
modularjam_both_Z5000
via url50's public channel
"Modular recording of a patch using two Tiptop Audio Z5000 with VC Reverb."
arduino synth noise demo
YouTube via mute01
"More controls for the arduino pocket piano! Mostly good for digital noise so far, but it works as a proof-of-concept."
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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