Saturday, September 14, 2024
PlantsSystem-Texture
video upload by plantssystem
"'Texture' was made with Prophet-5 and 'M'.
The rolling glissando is from 'M'.
The 琴 sound from Prophet-5 is very tasteful.
I used chorus from BOSS SE50 and RSS from Roland VS1880 as treatments to make the sound more 3-dimensional.
I hope you enjoy the delicate sound." --- M is Intelligent Music's M Software
JLR's Modular Synthesizers - System Breakdown #14 -
video upload by John L Rice
JLRs Modular Synthesizers - System Breakdown posts
"This is my fourteenth video breakdown/rundown, this time for my very smallest Eurorack system, just a single 4ms Pod20 case! This will be the last one for a while, thanks for enduring my unprecedented flood of breakdowns this month and for your patience waiting for the "big one" coming late 2024/early 2025 (hopefully!)
Index:
0:00 Beginning
0:20 Introduction
0:56 Module and Modifications
3:06 Final Words
4:14 Demo: "The Night Train Never Stops"
10:48 End
List of the modules in this system
Synthrotek: TST
Mutable instruments: Ears
Intellijel: Mult (modified)
Polaxis: Talko
4ms Company: Pod20 (modified)
Additional items shown and used for the demo:
Division 6: Business Card Synthesizer
Tall Dog: uClouds SE (clone of Mutable Instruments Clouds)
Tendrils Cables: patch cables
Strymon: BigSky and Timeline pedals
Lexicon: MX400
Train video clips licensed from Pixabay.com artists in the following order:
Coverr-Free-Footage
run2cross
AiVreaSaStii
DRUNK BABY IS DRUBK clips are from the "Woodsie TV" YouTube channel.
As always, thank you for watching, rating, following, subscribing, and commenting! 🥳 If you found the content of this video helpful, interesting, or entertaining, please consider showing your support so I can stay stocked up on coffee and cookies. 😋 https://buymeacoffee.com/johnlrice"
LABELS/MORE:
4ms,
eurorack,
intellijel,
MATRIXSYNTH Members,
Mutable Instruments,
Polaxis,
Synthrotek
Yamaha MODX6 Polybrute Samples Bass Leads Pads Synthesizer Rik Marston
video upload by Rik Marston Official
"Virtual Synthesizer Demo by Rik Marston
*Watch in HD!* *NO Talking!* *Turn it up!*
My Etsy store: AhnyxianSoundDesign
https://www.etsy.com/shop/AhnyxianSou..."
GS Music at Knobcon 2024: Showcasing the e7 and Bree6 Synthesizers
video upload by GS Music
https://www.gsmusic.com/
"We had an amazing time at Knobcon 2024! The feedback on our synthesizers was overwhelmingly positive, and we're excited to share a glimpse of the event with you. In this video, you'll see highlights from our booth where we showcased the GS Music e7 and Bree6 synthesizers, including hands-on demos and reactions from attendees. A big thanks to everyone who stopped by to check out our gear!"
Prophet X - Overwrite factory memory | Sysex patch edit tutorial
video upload by Espen Kraft
"If you receive a bunch of patches (both individual files or whole banks) for your Prophet X, you might not want to have these saved at the same locations they come in.
If you receive a patch that was saved in Bank U2 Patch 90, this will go into THAT memory location on your Prophet X as well, when you transfer it. Unfortunately you can't put it in another memory location when you transfer it. You can of course save it to some place else after you've transferred it to Patch 90 (this example), but only to the 4 different U-banks.
UNLESS.... you edit the sysex file itself before transferring it to your own PX. By doing so you can set it to go exactly where you want. You can even overwrite the factory patches if you want. All banks and patches U1-U4, F1-F4 and A1-A4 can be overwritten in the sysex transfer.
I'm fully aware there exists several library apps and software for the Prophet X that will help you do this. These costs money. My method is totally free.
In this video I'm using a free binary decoder called HdX to load, inspect, edit and save a sysex file. I'm using Bome SendSX to transfer the edited sysex file from my computer to my PX.
Both these programs are free.
You can certainly edit the sysex file from within the transfer program itself as well."
Oberheim TEO-5 vs Sequential Take 5 | Oberheim TEO-5 vs OB-6 vs OB-X8 // which synth is BEST?
video upload by Yuki The Synth Dragon
0:00 opening info and volume differences
2:40 basic init patch comparison
5:30 pulse waves and pwm
10:10 filter differences and resonance differences
21:30 making the same patch on both synths
33:00 effects / reverb comparison
37:00 more oscillator comparison (triangle vs sine as well)
38:30 FM comparison
And from Miles Away:
Oberheim TEO-5 vs OB-6 vs OB-X8 // which synth is BEST?
video upload by Miles Away
"Shootout / comparison of the three high end analog synthesizers from Oberheim / Sequential. Which should you get?
All 3 synths were recorded direct into UAD Apollo 16 interface with no EQ or pre-amp coloring. While I did my best to level match all 3 of the synths, these are analog instruments with a high variance in dymanic range, so at some points, one synth will sound louder than others. For example, the OB-6 sometimes sounds louder than the others, because of its inherently hotter levels driving into its internal mixer, despite reading similar levels on the meter. It's a fine balance to get the levels close, without overcompressing the master audio file, so I went for as transparent of a recording as possible, so keep that in mind if you have issues with level matching.
0:00 - intro, what we are doing today
1:04 - same patch compared on all 3 synths
2:11 - init patch comparison & why the OB-6 sounds so different
2:54 - oscillator section comparison
4:30 - pulse width & modulation workflow differences
7:39 - filter section comparison
11:23 - envelope comparison on a classic PWM string sound
15:50 - patch comparison, classic OB pad sound
18:24 - playing the exact same chord back to back
18:57 - unique features of TEO-5
24:47 - unique features of OB-6
31:20 - unique features of OB-X8
40:33 - TEO-5 sound demo no talking
45:49 - OB-6 sound demo no talking
49:28 - OB-X8 sound demo no talking
55:19 - which one should you buy?
56:52 - my conclusions & thoughts on all 3 synths
Check out my Custom Miles Away Synth Patches featured in this video: https://shop.milesawayofficial.com/co..."
PlantsSystem-Emphasis
video upload by plantssystem
"'Emphasis' was made using three Arturia imini controlled by 'M'.
It had a thick and dark sound.
It's a clone of the moog minimoog."
Novation PEAK / Demo 4 / Ambient
video upload by Brad Shields
"Number 4 in the series of the PEAKS vast sound possibilities. Featuring: Deep Space, Wavetables, Strings, Arpeggiators. All FX are from the PEAK. No external processing."
An industrial drumkit for the Modor DR-2 (no external FX, no talk)
video upload by Richard DeHove
"The original concept for the DR-2 saw it as an enhanced 909. That's pretty much irrelevant now as the DR-2 has been developed into something far deeper. Yet you can still see traces of its origins in the step entry and many of the core sounds. Personally I'm not a fan of the 909 mainly because it keeps you penned into a defined territory of sound where weirdness is not allowed. I like odd sounds in my drum machines.
I think the great balancing act with drum machines is between providing immediate excellent drum sounds, and providing enough tweakable range to allow genuine sound design and experimentation. At one end you have untweakable machines like the 606; at the other extreme are samplers where the range becomes so vast you can get distracted by endless sample banks. One solution is to have both, but that leads to different problems where you have too many one-trick machines.
Where does the DR-2 sit? You can certainly feel it's 909 roots in that those sorts of kits and sounds fall out of the machine with almost no effort. You can hear that sound in many DR-2 demos: tight bass drums with rimshots, hats and snappy snares. But the parameters are wide enough, and the available drum models weird enough, that you can get away from that quite easily.
That was the aim here: Can the DR-2 move into a more industrial sound without any external processing? It's easy enough to dirty things up with fuzz and EQ, but what about the raw sound?
In the two demo tracks I use a single set of drum models (from left to right): Tom, Ride cymbal, Noise bassdrum, Claps, Claps, and Rumble bassdrum. Each pattern has a slightly tweaked version of those same drum models saved as a kit. I've used the internal tilt filter, parametric EQ and distortion. I'm not game to use the compressors yet - I still need to learn how to tame them.
On the first track I start with just two sounds and am using a polyrhythmic clock in 8/12 time on channel 3. It gives an unsettling feel and constant variation to what is otherwise a simple 16-step pattern.
Of course there's no processing or effects other than what you see. It's pure DR-2. Even the volume between patterns is unaltered.
(And as per the thumbnail image: The DR-2 needs an all-black version).
0:00 Arhythmia
2:02 Dirty Tom
Many thanks to my kind patrons who keep this channel ad-free
My website: https://richarddehove.com/"
Korg Wavestate - "Impulse" 40 Performances (Soundset)
video upload by LFOstore
"Lfo.store presents "Impulse" soundset for Korg Wavestate.
Buy: https://lfostore.sellfy.store/p/sr-ko...
More Wavestate presets: https://lfostore.sellfy.store/search/...
Soundset by Sacral Reason
Korg Wavestate is a powerful synthesizer with a lot of potential and an incredible variety of sounds, this time, we will dive into the world of pulsations together with 'Impulse'.
More movement! More emotion!
40 dance performances are waiting for you!
In the bank you will find deep pluck, massive bass, lead, pad, poly, sequences and arpeggios that will fill your compositions with new colors and emotions.
Suited for all modern genres of electronic music: trance, house, classic electronica, downtempo.
We put all our effort & inspiration to make this patches suited for many genres & styles of electronic music.
Every patch of our soundset is musical & can be immediately used in your tracks & production.
Welcome to the universe of sounds."
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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