Title link takes you to the demo on sequencer.de. It's a good one.
Tuesday, July 25, 2006
Zero Oscillator (Cyndustries) AudioDemo
Title link takes you to the demo on sequencer.de. It's a good one.
Analog Solutions Black Coffee
Someone posted an Analog Solutions Black Coffee for sale on AH along with a link to a review on Electronic Musician by none other than Mike Peake. Mike Peake was one of the guys behind the Alesis Andromeda. He was probably the most connected with customers and was a regular on AH and the-gas-station at one point. Title link takes you to the review. I rememember when the Black Coffee came out.The asking price for the used unit was $499. New it ran for $595 and $339 minus midi and ready to be racked as a module. Not bad when you consider it's specs.
Black Coffee Specifications
Sound Engine analog subtractive synthesis
Polyphony 1 note (monophonic)
Audio Inputs (1) ⅛" on front panel; (1) ¼" on rear panel
Audio Outputs (1) ⅛" main and (1) ⅛" LFO, both on front panel; (1) ¼" main on rear panel
Patch Cord Connections (CV and audio) (8) ⅛" minijacks on front panel; (3) ¼" and (1) ⅛" on rear panel
Sound Sources (1) VCO; (1) suboscillator; (1) LFO; (1) noise generator
Filter (1) resonant lowpass; 24 dB/octave
Effects Processor (1) ring modulator
Amplifier (1) VCA
MIDI-to-CV Converter MIDI In and Thru; pitch, modulation, gate, accent, and legato
Power 15VAC, 500 mA wall wart
Dimensions 4.00" (W) × 5.25" (H) × 8.00" (D)
Weight 2.2 lb.
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
LABELS/MORE: Alesis, Analogue Solutions, Octave
LABELS/MORE: Alesis, Analogue Solutions, Octave
concert for cat's dreams - New Flickr Shot
flickr by arrrika. For those of you with a toe, I mean cat fetish.toe jam?
Update: Funny, apparently arrrika has a flicker set of her feet. Not only that, but I blogged her feet in the past: pony socks. Hmm... should probably send these to Oldschool Sound.
Monday, July 24, 2006
New order - Perfect kiss on YouTube
Voyetra 8 drives the sequence. You can see two of them about 1 minute in. I remember the first time I saw this video when it came out. I couldn't believe how simple the synth parts were yet how full the sound was. Peter Hook seems to be doing the most work.
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
LABELS/MORE: Octave, Synth Babes, Synthettes, Video
LABELS/MORE: Octave, Synth Babes, Synthettes, Video
this is an anteek organ
"it is a clasic organ the we have preserved in a good condition for years..it is a pretty desent size ready to travle.come's with free case !it's original price is 2500$ or highter"Yap... Gotta get me an anteek organ...
via this auction.
via the comments of this post.
The Flying Machine and The Time Warp Sound Clash System
Title link takes you to a Google translated version of shimomura-onkyo. The Flying machine appears to be an all analog modular effects unit. The original comes with analog delay, an LFO and filter. You can then snap in additional modules listed on this page. If anyone knows what these modules do, please feel free to comment. via ben shannon illustrator.
Also check out the Time Warp Sound Clash System while there. From what I could make of it, it's a stone from the archipelago housed in this box. It makes a sound every 1 in a 1000 times. : ) File this one under Sand Dunes, Nature Dioramas, and Saturn."The strange stone that was celebrated western calendar 1003, with the island which has the [arimantado] archipelago it puts out 1 time sound in 1000. As for the timbre of that stone there was a reporting that also making the heart of the people dance can also make be softened. And that when just puts out 1 time sound in 1000, incident occurred. The hoodlums who come from the direction east took that stone from the inhabitant, carried back to your own country. But after that, no one those which know the news of that stone as for was .......
These 2 human groups which are pulling before the man where the heart that is easy it exceeds the time and it has the stone which puts out day and the sound which have 2003, appeared. With the [motemote] being wild with [avuangiyarudo], these 2 human groups which are pulling to invent the device which works the timbre of that stone skillfully, being the cheerful and being sexy with the honest person whose generosity is good these 2 human groups which are pulling turned in the country with that device and made the heart of the people my [zu] biting. And now that device is placed in here, (it continues). Sound of 1 times, please enjoy in 1000. Pushing patience. Killer."
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
Electronika EM-26 Soviet Analog Vocoder
Title link takes you to shots and samples pulled from this auction. "It was manufactured in 1988 by 'SAM', a soviet military radio plant (Moscowsky radiofactory) at Moscow."
Trips me out that some of not all of these vintage Russian analogs were made in a soviet military radio plant.
$500 Buchla




Saw this on on Music Thing. Apparently this Buchla has a break out A/V box. Awesome, dude. Check it!
Play Industries
Title link takes you there. Via HCGPM on Analog Industries.
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
Son of Frankensynth
Title link takes you to the module listings on Buzzlick Music.
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
EMS Synthi A/VCS3 Synthesizer Voice Card
Shot via this auction.
Chrispy Synthesizer
Title link takes you there. Not much info. Looks like a DIY synth. If anyone knows more about this one, feel free to post a comment. via sequencer.de.
Sunday, July 23, 2006
The SMS Matrix
The Song of the Dunes
That's right. Apparently you can create sound with sand dunes. Title link takes you to some video samples so you can see and hear it for yourself. Below is the abstract from this white paper. I guess if you can "play" water, why not sand. Another one of Earth's synthesizers."Since Marco Polo [1] it has been known that some sand dunes have the peculiar ability of emitting a loud sound with a well-defined frequency, sometimes for several minutes. The origin of this sustained sound has remained mysterious, partly because of its rarity in nature. It has been recognized that the sound is not due to the air flow around the dunes but to the motion of an avalanche, and not to an acoustic excitation of the grains but to their relative motion. By comparing several singing dunes and two controlled experiments, one in the laboratory and one in the field, we finally demonstrate here that the frequency of the sound is the frequency of the relative motion of the sand grains. The sound is produced because some moving grains synchronize their motions. The existence of a velocity threshold in both experiments further shows that this synchronization comes from an acoustic resonance within the flowing layer: if the layer is large enough it creates a resonance cavity in which grains self-synchronize. Sound files are provided as supplementary materials."
Peter Zinovieff Electronic Music Dairy Summer 1976

This one in via First Last.
http://members.tripod.com/werdav/vocpzino.htm
Peter Zinovieff was the founder of EMS.
"Electronic Music Studios Ltd (EMS) London, England. Beginning in a backyard bomb shelter, Peter Zinovieff has created the EMS Company devoted solely to the production of electronic music instruments." Quote pulled from this page.
Some excerpts from the diary:
"Today is another grey day ... I wish I was in Raasay. There was a storm last night and the studio roof started to leak. It has leaked every year since it was built and every year it is repaired. Water is dripping onto the computer section. Part of the ceiling looks as if it is going to collapse."
"What an idiosyncratic place they must have found EMS. Chickens in the garden. Computers in the basement. Children rushing around the kitchen. I wisk Sofka to school on the Honda. I meet Robin half way down Putney Hill. 400 yards zoom. "
"We discuss, rather drunkenly, the future of synthesizers and how organs are becoming more like synthesizers and synthesizers more like organs I explain that I have decided that EMS should not try and compete in this market but that we should continue to stick to educational and sophisticated machines."
"I tell Ludwig about the terrible week that has just passed and the exciting constructive week that lies ahead. Ludwig tells me of the bad financial state we are in and how the studio is too expensive for EMS to support and how I'm too extravagant. I can tell he is tired. I suggest that we discuss it at the EMS meeting tomorrow. Already then the meeting is diluted from microprocessors and Bessel functions into one of financial fussing. Another decision.
Later Ludwig quietens down. Nothing better than tea and cake, wine and a peat fire. We really get on very well. It must be a nightmare running EMS' financial affairs. We get to bed at about 1. I am glad Ludwig is back."
"We discuss the Glasgow Hospital project. This is an application that has been submitted to the Wolfson Foundation for a large amount of money to be spent on the computer interrogation of patients and the computer diagnosis of their illnesses. Apparently the right 12 questions could diagnose any known disease. The idea is that the patients will be asked questions in regional accents by the computer. They would then respond by pressing a set of simple keys. Yes, no, sometimes etc. EMS will provide all the hardware and the hospital would provide the doctors. It would be very interesting if it works. Alan will be in charge of the project."
"I must stop the EMS people drinking too much at these lunches. Peter Eastty will be slurred and cantakerous this afternoon if he has any more.
All the EMS team are very high powered. Even though some - like David Cockerell, Richard Monkhouse and Alan Sutcliffe are friends and consultants, they still play an enormously important role in the company. We are extremely lucky. "
"Two pop stars arrive with a roadie at 7. They meet everyone going off from the meeting to play pool at the pub. David and Tim are experts at billiards. In Raasay we found an old bagatelle set. I hope it pulls them back there. David walked in snow for the first time in his life at the new year in Raasay.
It soon turns out that the roadie is the greatest pop-star. He's from Tangerine Dream. One of the others wears a long furry earring. Call me Indie Robin recognises him from Chicago. He says he's travelling incognito. It's a good earring he wears for that.
German pop-stars always seem more workmanlike than Americans. English ones fall into one or other camp but usually are dressed up. The Germans wear scruffy jeans and shave. They have come to look at the Vocoder. We also show them the latest modules that Tim is making.
Robin soon takes them off for who knows what with some friends. Rose, Leo and I go to a newly-opened Russian restaurant in Putney. I become maudlin for the gypsies and the islands of Petersboorg that I never knew."
"I had a terrible dream last night about my neck being cut away leaving my head stuck rigid on my body. I woke rather sick. It must have been too much wine at dinner. Suddenly I realise that it is pouring with rain and that I had removed the polythene sheeting from the roof for Hans' lunch the day before yesterday. That is why I had nightmares and why I feel sick.
My worst fears are justified. Water is once again pouring into the studio. Two panels have fallen off the ceiling Onto the computer racks."
"We open a bottle of Champagne. Ludwig thinks I am extravagant. After lunch Richard comes with the video camera interface. It works as soon as he plugs in the board. My programs have been adapted and we are able to test it straight away.
With this invention I am able to derive patterns from a video image. At the sirnplest these images might be a waveform drawn on a piece of graph paper but at a more complex level I think I will be able to derive very useful musical patterns from more random video images. For instance say I point the camera at a flower and say I apportion density of image to harmonic content and I scan from left to right across the stern of the flower. Then imagine that these sounds are pretty mediocre. Dull. Say then that I turn the camera slightly to the left or choose another flower. Will the sounds be more or less interesting? They certainly won't be the same. What images will give the best sounds. In a way it is getting a video picture to provide a pattern for improvisation.
We try it out. I point the camera into the garden. I run VOCAB and I assign the Video parameters to control DOB.
Suddenly the most marvellously rich, varied and amazing sounds come pouring out of the speakers. They ripple and change. They are the first alssolutely fantastic sounds that the oscillator bank has made. Everyone is moved. At first no-one believes that they are not pr~omposed but as I turn the camera the sounds change. They are convinced. In some ways we are frightened. It's like in the story of tuning in to the death cries of roses as they are cut.
We call over Ludwig. He rings up Germany. I ring David in Paris we hold the telephone to the loudspeakers but there is probably little chance that they can hear what is going on. The children come down. I dare not alter anything. Perhaps the program has got into a random loop. I save it and restart it. Wherever I point the camera there is another set of sounds. Each more rich and varied than the last.
I must keep this a secret. I shall give it to Harry for Orpheus. We must not allow these marvellous things to be heard for a year or two. Apollo's gift to Orpheus was music. I wonder where these sounds come from. Perhaps it's not fluke that we have been working on Orpheus for 3 years. This is our reward.
What a day ! Perhaps all days will now be magical again!
I shall use the last seven days of this journal for my Glasgow Musica Nova talk.
Peter Zinovieff
Summer 1976
source: Bulletin of the Computer Arts Society May 1977 "
The Keytek CTS2000

Title link takes you to more including samples on DVDBorn.
"It's a wavetable synth with 2 oscillators/voice, 8 voices and analogue CEM 3389 filters, the same as in the Waldorf Microwave I. Each digital oscillator can read up to three wave tables at a time."
Mini Moog - New Flickr Shot
flickr by corkyburger. That would be a Voyager. Title link takes you to the full size shot where you can zoom in.
ARP 4012 Filter
Another shot of an ARP filter pulled from this auction. Funny. I never realized they looked like this. Learn something new every day... Check out the seller's other items as well.
filters - New Flickr Shot
flickr by shistec ra. Trips me out that the ARP filter modules came in little boxes like that. Title link takes you to more.Update via inverse room in the comments:
"The Yamaha SY-2's filters are potted the same way...they were the same as the ones in the GX-1. Check this out, Old Crow tried (successfully) to replicate them by melting away the resin and identifying the parts: link."
Wolfram Tones
I missed putting a post up on this when I first saw it as I thought it was just a site to make ringtones. Turns out you can do that and a lot more. "WolframTones works by taking simple programs from Wolfram's computational universe, and using music theory and Mathematica algorithms to render them as music. Each program in effect defines a virtual world, with its own special story--and WolframTones captures it as a musical composition."
via Doktor Future:
"I've used Mathematica for about 15 years now and have even used it as a synthesizer ala csound and even metasynth. It has functions built in for convolution, FFT's, and all sorts of stuff. Want an oscillator? just make a matrix with SIN's. It plays audio too. It can also be used to read and write MIDI! Not too shabby for a 'math' package :)
Here's a list of some of the 'notebooks' you can download to do this sort of stuff: link
(the list is interesting, but you need Mathematica to do anything in it)
There are few programs in the world as comprehensive as Mathematica. I went down to Champaign Illinois and visited their HQ in fall of last year.
Oh, and here's a really dull help file that shows you how to make a scale, and do stuff like play a perfect 5th.
link
It's texty, not sexy :)"
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
SynclavierX on DVDBorn

"SynclavierX is an OS X application to control actual Synclavier voice cards and memory without the need of the obsolete original computer." Title link takes you to more on DVDBorn, including links to resources, PostPro, Sound Design, and Reference manuals.
InSEQt Sequencer
Sequencer by Anyware Instruments, maker of the SEMtex. Title link takes you to more on sequencer.de.
Nature Diorama with Natural Synthesizer and Electronic Birds
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
Saturday, July 22, 2006
Bontempi! - New Flickr Shot
The SMS Cinema Display and The SMS Matrix
The SMS Cinema Display via Mike Jerugim.
Add some knobs just above the keys and you'd be set.

Update: The SMS Matrix via Mike Jerugim. One knob to rule them all.
Add some knobs just above the keys and you'd be set.

Update: The SMS Matrix via Mike Jerugim. One knob to rule them all.
Oberheim OB-Xa
Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. It's currently at $2425.
Zero OSC in the Kitchen
Via Doktor Future in the comments of this post:one
two
three
updates via the comments:
From Doktor Future: 1, 2.
From Mono/Poly: link
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
LABELS/MORE: Cynthia, Rdio Shck, synthesizers.com
LABELS/MORE: Cynthia, Rdio Shck, synthesizers.com
Cynthia Zero Oscillator in Dotcom Format
See dealers on the right for pricing and availability on gear.
LABELS/MORE: Cynthia, synthesizers.com
LABELS/MORE: Cynthia, synthesizers.com
Alesis Ion - Inside and Out
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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



































