MATRIXSYNTH


Saturday, August 04, 2007

Doepfer A-100 MiniCase

via this auction
Doepfer A-100 MiniCase (Black Texture - Beauty Version)
a. A-100 miniature case ("A-100 beauty case")
b. built-in A-100 miniature power supply/bus board with higher output current (200 mA @ +/-12V and 50 mA @ +5V)
c. width 28 HP (e.g. three modules with 8 HP and one module with 4 HP)
d. 4 bus connectors (i.e. max. 4 modules)
e. alternatively raw wood or black coated
f. outside measures: about 160 width x 155 height x 125 depth (mm)
g. max. module depth in the left half: about 50 mm (because of the heat sinks of the power supply)
h. max. module depth in the right half: about 90 mm
i. pay attention to the suitable module depths if you order the modules, e.g. A-112, A-113, A-126 or A-199 (because of the spring reverb tank) cannot be mounted into the A-100MC.
j. the handles on top of the cases are enclosed but not mounted, two holes with about 3 mm diameter have to be drilled to mount the handle, if the miniatures cases have to be stacked on top of each other the handles have to be omitted.

via brian comnes

MFOS Weird Sound Generator Boards Coming Soon

via Ray Wilson of Music From Outer Space, home of the SoundLab.

"Calling all lovers of weird sounds...

PC Boards have been ordered for the MFOS WSG (Weird Sound Generator). Should have them in a week or so. A couple of new features have been added that will more than likely triple (perhaps quadruple) the weird sound generation fun.

They will be available here.
and of course here...

Cheers
Ray"

Stevie Wonder


YouTube via Mckinley0039.
Herbie Hancock talks about Stevie Wonder. Features Stevie playing the uber Yamaha GX-1.
Via Failed Muso where you'll find an excellent post on Yamaha's Uber Synths. Check it out.
Update: Also see Stevie Wonder and TONTO in this previous post.

Peter Grenader on Waveshapers

Via Peter Grenader of Plan B via AH:

"Waveshapers don't really - or better put, shouldn't 'effect' a VCO per say, although they can play havoc if you're not careful. PWM circuits are notorious for this as many times they take the signal very close to the op amp's power rail, and depending which op amp you use it can cause real problems.

In any event, what a waveshaper does is take the core signal - meaning the waveform the oscillating engine creates on it's own, usually either Sawtooth or Triangle - and through a series of added circuits bends that into whichever waveform it needs at a given output. It's real trickery at times - reverse biasing of diodes, carefully timed disection to rearrange core signals into other shapes, etc. It's not an E.Q. Although one could filter a saw to it's first harmonic and have a sine, it wouldn't have the fidelity required. You have to do it other ways.

The waveshapers account for the bulk of a VCO's circuit. Along with the Expo converter, that's where the magic happens and it's really critical stuff. It's what makes a VCO sound as it does and designers guard their methods. For instance - while I've given some of my dealers - those who have in-house repair facilities - schematics of my VCO's core, I omit some of the waveshapers. If they've got a dead saw or sine for instance, I tell them what part needs to be replaced. If that doesn't do it, they send it back to me. I'm not the only one who's that paranoid.

There are three blocks to a VCO:

1) Expo Converter/Freq Control - This takes all the input controls - Freq Pot, Freq VC inputs, 1V/oct inputs, sums them to one voltage string, scales it as needed (somewhere around 18 mv/octave), and then converts that voltage to current through a circuit called an Expo Converter.

2) The Core. This is what does the oscillating. Basically it's a fixed-ratio envelope generator that gooses itself to start again, once per cycle. A secondary goose comes from the external SYNC input. The core can only manifest one waveform. There are a few things that determine what that waveform will be, namely the configuration of the circuit called an Integrator and where you place the capacitor in that integrator. Do it one way, you get a saw. Do it another way, you get a Triangle. The current from the expo converter gets injected into the core loop and that's what changes the oscillating frequency.

3) Waveshapers. One per waveform. They take the core signals and do the bending. One circuit for sine, one for triangle, one for saw, one for PWM, blah. Based on what waveform a given VCO's core produces, sometimes you've got to take the output from one waveshaper to make yet another waveform because it can't do it in one step. My core is triangle, I don't have to worry about this. They all take the triangle core signal to make their the output waveforms in single generation, thus all of the M15's waveforms remain in phase. All I do is fan the triangle to the string. But you do have to condition the core signals for the various applications. Some of the waveshapers need hearty signals to do their thing, some need comparatively low-amplitude signals, and you've got to scale your core signal for each.

So this doesn't sound all that bad, does it? and it isn't..not until you concern yourself with range, stability and tracking - this takes the bulk of the work in VCO design. It ain't easy and at times it's magic, but it's magic that must be repeatable under a plethora of operating environments. Back in the halcyon days, when musicians limited themselves to one system, designers could fine tune each module in their range to work with one another more efficiently. A wet dream compared to the Frakensynth 21st Century, all that goes out the window because people are using their Serge's with MOTM and Buchlas with Plan B's. Also know that many of these steps I've outlined are quite noisy. You have to deal with that. You have to assure your output waveforms retain their amplitude across the entire frequency range - that doesn't happen for free, either. There are mechanical considerations as well, specifically how the traces are thrown on the board. Some work as antennas which cause major problems if too long. Some can't be too close to others or interference will occur. Basically it's a huge undertaking and it's got to be right. You can get away with sonic defects in filters -people will propably prefer the results. With a VCO - no dice. Everything has to work correctly, in time and in spec and you have to find a way to do that affordably.

I'm skirting over much detail here, but I think this gives you an idea.

hope this helps," Pleas note this was sent to AH, so Peter will see questions sent there but not necessarily here although he has been known to drop by.

Update: More via Peter on AH:
"One must remember there are bunches of ways to create an oscillator core. Charge pump, 555 timers (yikes!), 4046 PLL's (I would recommend this over the 555), Feedback loops with logic gates, etc. And as a result different methods must be used to shape these core signals into the final waveforms.

Sometimes you have to use the output of one waveshaper to create another final waveform - the core signal will not allow you to manifest all of them, so you do it in steps.

OK - if one were to draw on paper four waveform types of the exact same freq, - sine, saw, tri and square, it would be done (I assume) with all four starting their cycle at the same time, going through their pattern so to speak, and ending at the same time. By doing this, you would be showing these four waveforms in phase with one another. But sometimes you can't do that. For instance, common square to saw shapers need the trailing edge of the squarewave to do it's thing, not the rising edge. Given that that square is 50% duty cycle, then the saw pattern begins 180 degrees out of phase with the core signal, and other waveforms which can produce their outputs from the core signal directly.

Next question - so where does that squarewave come from?
Along with the final output, most cores produce a timing pulse as well - the signal used to 're-goose' the core to begin it's cycle again. It's produced by a carefully tuned comparator circuit which pops a high output at the exactly the right time to open and close what's known as the flyback, a switch that opens the closes the current loop that charges the integrator. Open the loop, the integrator discharges. close it, it charges. The comparator is fed the core signal - so it's output states are governs by the very core it's enabling. You bias the comparator to trigger at the right voltasge level. Do it right, your core singal's fidelity is maintained. Do it wrong, your triangle is leaning over on it's side or pitifully low in amplitude.

Some waveshapers use the core output, some use the comparator output.

Here's a really odd analogy: Let's say the VCO core is a bathtub. The liquid is the core waveform, the faucet is the current loop and the plug, and the guy working it is the comparator. He plugs up the drain, the tub fills at a certain point, he pulls the plug, the water begins to drain. This goes on over and over, the water level going up and down. They are fed from and effect one another. But they are doing their thing out of phase. If the plug gets pulled when the tub is empty, it'll remain that way. If it's pulled when it's full, then the cycle is intact. If it's not pulled at the righ ttime, the water won't make it's target level. There's your visual.

So tying my original statement to this model - Some waveshapers need the empty tub, some need the full tub. Waveforms which are produced from these two concurrently are out of phase with one another - while at the same frequency, they don't begin and end at the same time."

"I need to add that the circuit I described - the current loop/comparator pair, is one type of circuit used to create a core waveform -there are other methods which are easier (on paper) to design than this. But, they suck. Linearity is often poor, the range is pitiful, amplitude levels are hard to maintain throughout that range, they're sensitive to temperature variations, they are unstable as hell. I see core VCO circuits that use a 555, or worse yet a logic gate pair to create their core signal, in which in order to address these variables the guy was forced to hang scads of parts all over the place. If the purpose of the exercise was to prove that a stable VCO can be made in this way, cool but real world - it's not going to work predictably. So instead of hacking it, it's best just to use a core which will give you the fidelity, linearity, range and stability required to do the job. If electronic components were finite - a 1k being EXACTLY 1K, a 10uf cap being EXACTLY that - then these types of alternate circuits would stand a chance. But things don't work that way real world."

"More ramblings on alternate methods -

I know a guy named Jerry Steckling - brilliant guy, who used to make mobile recording studio installations out of the panels used to for walk-in restaurant freezers which were f'ing incredible, who later went to Skywalker for a number of years and became a very big cheese up there, who now makes his own speakers, multichannel speaker systems and amplifiers. He had a pet project to produce a speaker which used a flame as the oscillating body instead of the driver. Wack idea, but on paper it's possible, and if anyone could do it, Jerry could. We had many jokes about this - how big is YOUR flame - that sort of thing, but while he knew it was possible, he'd never go that route obviously for anything more than an experiment followed by a good larf.

There are many ways to produce a VCO core, but....

you get the idea."

kII HandTracker


YouTube via audiocommander.

Sent my way via insektgod.

"kII HandTracker is a sensory input device for the midibox speakjet application. It uses harmonisation, has a master/slave beat detection mode and a bunch of other cool features. Both applications (the driver for the SpeakJet as well as the sensor matrix) will be released as DIY-projects @midibox.org. For more informations see: link

Credits:
MBHP/MIOS (midibox.org hard- and software platform): T. Klose, uCapps.de
kII driver application for MIOS and sensorMatrix: Michael Markert, audiocommander.de"

At one point I thought it was going to break out with Daft Punk's, "Around The World".

Roland SH-1000 Japanese demo


YouTube via ApolloBoy.

Roland RS-09

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

"It has amazing-sounding silky smooth strings and organ pads. The well-known Roland chorus is switchable between on/off and Ensemble I & II. Hook it up in stereo, switch it on, and feel your knees get weak. Has lots of control over the sound, vibrato depth, rate, delay, etc. Also plenty of jacks on the back, including Gate out for triggering external envelopes for filters, etc, and a jack for Ext in, so you can run other instruments through the RS-09’s amazing chorus."

Friday, August 03, 2007

Moogfest 2007

"To honor Bob Moog and commemorate his groundbreaking achievements, hordes of renowned musicians and longstanding Moog users will gather in New York City on Saturday, September 22 at B.B. King's Bar & Grill in Times Square (237 w. 42nd Street between 7th & 8th Avenues) to celebrate Moogfest 2007.

This Year's Extravaganza Features...

Thomas Dolby
Jordan Rudess
Adam Holzman
Spiraling
Don Preston
Gershon Kingsley
Herb Deutsch
Erik Norlander


Showtime is 7:30 p.m. Tickets for this special event are $45 and are available at the box office (212-997-4144) or at all Ticketmaster outlets.

For more inforation visit www.moogfest.com

Check out the 2006 DVD for a look at last year's action!"

New Modcan Modules

Via Bruce Duncan of Modcan on AH:

"Hi All,
I am finally ready to release two new modules for the B series. The Digital Delay 59B and the Quad Envelope 60B. A series versions in the fall.

Please check them out at your leisure on their respective web pages at www.modcan.com Prices are on the price list.

The new Quad Envelope is perhaps the best EG available for both features and speed. It has an additional hold or punch stage that is unique to this design. Also functions as a Quad LFO with 4 stage wave shape parameters.

The Digital delay is also a terrific module and has many features you won't find on your old stomp box version including Delay duration clock Sync and CV control of Regeneration and Delay time.

Both modules are in full production and available to order now."



machinedrum jam


YouTube via daswesen. Sent my way via manuel.
"I show the instrument machines, M2 and M3 are prerecorded tweaks into CTRL-AL machines. At one time I switch into classic mode, that wasn't quite intentional at that point but that's a sweet trick as well. Else the standard muting/unmuting of tracks, as well as some FUNCTION+Param tweaking on filter and SRR. I often switch back to stored kit with FUNCTION+CLASSIC, especially after mashing up the sound with CTRL-AL."

machinedrum sequencing


YouTube via daswesen. Sent my way via manuel.
"making a new pattern from scratch, takes abit of time hehe. I had the instruments done though."

Miscellaneous Audio Experiments - Using the Effector 13 as an Oscillator

via zerosum:

"Ive been using the Effector 13 Truly Beautiful Disaster as an oscillator Smile Yeah its really really cool. Sequencing with the Binary Zone into the TBD in, then fed into the Miniwave,TM-1,TM-7. It does really cool kicks and can do 3 note basslines too."

Title link takes you to the samples and more info on Muff Wiggler's Mindless Chat Space.

Yamaha CX5M Music Computer


Click here for shots via this auction.

Note the connection of this piece and Microsoft? If anyone knows more about the relationship feel free to comment.

"You are looking at a Yamaha CX5M Music Computer. This unit came out in the very early 1980's and was an attempt by Yamaha to marry what was emerging as a very successful exploration of FM Synthesis and a computing platform, in this case the Microsoft MSX. At the time these units were unbelievably expensive and while I am not sure exactly what their true value is today (who is frankly) one thing I do know (and you too if you have read this far) is that they are becoming increasingly rare particularly those still bundled with the all important cartridges as this unit does, more on that later... the unit you are looking at here is in fact the later of the two models that Yamaha came out with. The first shipped with the SFG-01 FM unit which had very limited MIDI support, in fact it was only able to communicate with a DX-7 (again more on that later). For that reason you needed a dedicated keyboard supplied by Yamaha to play it. The unit you are looking at here however is the later version that came with the 4 Operator SFG-05 FM unit. It has much better MIDI support and DOES NOT REQUIRE the additional Yamaha keyboard in case you were wondering. It can be played with any MIDI controller keyboard, I used a JV-30 and it played very well.
Ok so what is on offer, well quite a bit really:

1) The CX5M Unit, apart from one or two very minor scratches it is in excellent condition, no broken keys or anything like that. The unit consists of the MSX computer fitted with the Yamaha 4 Operator SFG-05 FM module;
2) The power supply, as above in excellent condition and works just fine;
3) The manuals, yes I still have them. They include:
a) The Yamaha SFG-05 FM Unit Owners Manual;
b) The original CX5M Owners Manual; and
c) The original CX5M / MSX Service Manual including ALL the schematics (these are like GOLD).
4) The cartridges. These are VERY VERY RARE, they include:
a) YRM-104 - FM Music Macro, provides a basic software language to allow the MSX and the SFG-05 in particular to be programmed, oh what fun!!
b) YRM-101 - FM Music Composer, as the name suggests it provides basic sequencing and composition. You also get the original manual with this;
c) YRM-102 - FM Voicing Program, this allows you to edit the 4 Operator SFG-05 unit sounds just like any other FM style patch editor; and
d) I left this until last simply because you would be hard pressed to get one of these anywhere right now. The YRM-103 - DX-7 Voicing Program, This cartridge will allow a DX-7 to be edited from the CX5M just as Yamaha had originally intended so if you own a DX-7 this may be of particular interest to you. It comes complete with its original packaging (a little worn but intact) and the original manual.
5) The cartridge adapter, The CX5M also comes with a slot at the rear of the unit. I believe it was used for connecting to external floppy drives and the like. Using the cartridge adapter you can also plug a standard MSX cartridge into this slot. Useful I guess if you can get a memory / storage cartridge which you can store your programs and sounds on.

The unit DOES NOT come with a monitor of any kind, it has a composite video output (the yellow kind) which I connected to my PC's capture card in preview mode so that I could switch screens between it and other windows, quite useful when editing actually."

via Loscha.

Update: Two screen shots of the OS via Zam in the comments. Also, more info on the OS and the relation with Microsoft in the comments added below.

Roland System 100m 181 Keyboard Controller


Click here for shots via this auction.

"49-Key Keyboard Controller for System 100M cabinets. This is quite a rare offering.. its a 49-Key Controller for the Roland System 100M modular systems. Very rare to find for sale individually. There are many System 100M cabinets out there with no matching keyboard, here is your chance to complete your system. There are obviously 49 Keys, a bender, controls for tuning and portamento, three position transpose switch, portamento on/off switch, mini-jack and standard phono jacks for control voltage, gate, trigger and bender, and the 6 PIN DIN plug."

via Loscha.

Oberheim Xpander

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.
"Vintage 6 Voice Analogue Polysynth (1984) The Xpander is an amazing synth.. few question its reputation as the most versatile and powerful analogue synth from the 80s. Programming possibilites are endless, the internal modulation matrix allows for sound design simply not possible in any other analogue synth of its time. It has a very unique sound, somewhat more mature and refined than the older Oberheim synths, but still having the signature Oberheim tone, in a somewhat more subdued way. In some ways it can also be more aggressive than the older oberheims, the 1pole filter is a killer.. have a listen to Sasha's "Xpander" track and you will hear immediately the character of the 1pole filter in this machine..

So many more features, 6 individual outs for each voice, individual cv/gate inputs to each voice, excellent midi specs, 5 LFOs, 5 envelopes, 3 tracking generators, 4 ramp generators, lag processors, 15 filter types.. too much stuff to mention, there is nothing else like it.
I suggest reading this soundonsound article for a thorough breakdown of this synth.

via Loscha.

Roland Jupiter-8

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

"Vintage 8 Voice Polyphonic Analogue Synthesizer. The Jupiter 8.. Roland's flagship professional polysynth from the early 80s.. yet to be surpassed. This is a beautiful and magical synthesizer like no other. Play a just a few notes and nostalgia from countless recordings of the past comes flooding to mind. Such joyous and amazing sounds emit from this machine..."

via Loscha.

Roland MC-4

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

"Roland MC-4
Vintage 4 Channel CV/Gate Sequencer MC-4A

This is a quite rare and hard to find CV/Gate sequencer from the late 70s early 80s..
If you are sequencing with vintage analog gear this is the cream of sequencers, ask anyone who has one and they will tell you it has the tightest timing and most flexible advanced programming features.
This is the A version, MC-4A. Internal Memory is 16Kbytes. It has not been upgraded.
Please note this is a 100V unit, in Australia and Europe you will require a stepdown transformer. It draws 25W so a relatively cheap transformer will be fine.
US may also require a small stepdown transformer to go down to 100V.."

via Loscha.

Nobukazu Takemura Interview (from Salon Magazine)


YouTube via likeafatrat. Sent my way via Loscha.
"play at his studio place: kyoto/Japan"
Spot the synths. Be sure to watch the gear pan towards the end.

Polyvox (Polivoks) CV/Gate Mod

Title link takes you to more info and shots of the mod.

Plan B Model 25 Now Available

"A quick note to announce that the Model 25 Multi-tasking Audio Processors will be at Analogue Haven tomorrow - Friday, August 3.

The M25 is the second swiss-army knife module in our range, the basic idea behind it to provide a series of useful synthesis functions without a hefty investment of real estate. Consisting of a Manual Attenuator (this was Tim Johnston's idea, and a great one), a dynamic VC Waveshaper, White/Pink analog Noise Generator, a Linear VCA with a separate velocity input, and a high-quality Ring Modulator which boasts over 65 dB of carrier suppression and a unique x-feedback function - all comfortably crammed into only 10HP of panel space.

More information can be found at the link below, replete with sound samples which I think are worth checking out."

Kokoro Scan



Cool video for an upcoming SEGA game for the Nintendo DS, featuring a Minimoog lead and some vocoder.
Sent my way via Kitsunexus. MP3 here.

明和電機 「一番素敵な体で行こう!」


YouTube via musica95. Sent my way via Chris Muir.

"The robotic vocalist, dubbed “Seamoons,” is a combination of mechanical bellows and a computer controlled rubber vocal chord that’s monitored and modified in real time, sounding something like a tiny electric Yma Sumac."

Note the robot with a mic. The above quote is a snip from here, where you will find more info on the artist, Maywa Denki, and the tools they use. BTW, if anyone knows/finds more info on the "guitar" like devices feel free to comment.

Waldorf Pulse Demo



via zerosum of zerosuminertia via the comments of this post.
You can download the mp3 here.

Jerry Lewis y el theremin


YouTube via pertinazmente. Sent my way via Vectorsynth.

ASM2-Wizard Etched


via Mark Pulver on AH.

"I got the etched panel for the ASM2-Wizard last night (thank you Laurie!) and I thought I'd share how it looks in the custom cabinet. This is a BIG box. I dunno that's its final location. Time to get the soldering iron out and get to this thing!

ref:
asm2.htm
asm2-wizard-about
nice-racks"

Hammond Novachords #117, #132, and #1431

via jonesalley:

"Here's an unusual grouping for you. From left to right, Hammond Novachords #117, #132, and #1431. They have recently been joined by their older brother, #61, but I don't have a current photograph. All four are complete and intact, except for a few missing or broken tubes, and all four will be undergoing a slow restoration process. Don't hold your breath..."

Tenori-On Ships Sep 4

Remember the Tenori-On? Looks like it will actually ship on September 4th. Title link takes you to more info on pixelsumo.

MOOG Model 15

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

(1)907a fixed filter bank,
(1) 995 group of 3 attenuators
(1) 904=A Voltage control low pass filter,
(2) 902 VCAs,
(2) 911 envelope generators,
(1) 921 VCO,
(1) 923 Hi pass & low pass filter bank with pink and white noise source.
(2) 921B slave oscilators,
(1) 921A oscillator driver,
(1) bottom section includes mixer, mults, reversable attenuators, trigger outputs, control outs.

As always be careful. This one's from a (0) seller. Might be new to Ebay, might not...

MOOG Prodigy 336A

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Sequential Circuits Fugue

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Running out of Space

via seen-da-sizer on Gearslutz. Sent my way via Magnus.

"I am so jealous of everyone’s space. My room is way too small. What's next for me? Guess I have to nail my synths to the ceiling…"

Hmm... A modular ceiling...

Have fun spotting the synths.

Goldsmith's College - The old Control Room

Spot the synths. Some answers after the hop. via sequencer.de.

Sci-Fi Guys


OK, first off I am stretching this one a little on synth content so consider yourself warned. Dave, creator of one of our favorite and only synth toons, The Packrat, sent me and a few others a link to an old toon he did called Sci-Fi Guys. I wanted to put up a post on it, so of course I asked if any of the toons featured any synths. Duh. Turns out they did for audio. The following are Dave's words on the toon followed by the synths. Note Randal of redshiftdigitalaudio and the On The Bench posts also worked on this.

"For about a year and a half, my old Sci-Fi Guys toons haven't been available online at all, after Camp Chaos shut down it's 'Other Shows' section. At a rate of about one per week, since May, I've uploaded them all to Newgrounds. The eleventh and final episode (the Christmas one) will get shoved up there in November sometime.

The title song for Sci-Fi Guys is called 'Ryu' off my Parallax CD 'visit the entropics.'

There are other very synthesized sound cues and transitions in the films also, taken directly from the album.

This music was sequenced by me at home, all on a rickety Korg 01/W, but the exported general MIDI files were painstakingly re-mapped & produced by Randel at redshiftdigitalaudio (the tech guy behind the "On the Bench" posts linked from your blog from time to time). A few overdubs, samples and leads were added later. Synths I definitely know that were used: Waldorf Pulse & Microwave, Clavia Nord rack, Korg MS2000R & Wavestation, a couple of Oberheim Matrix-6R's, Roland JD-800 & three JD-990's, and Yamaha VL1-m.

--D"

Audio Damage Dr. Device and Replicant Demos via Brian Comnes

Audio Damage Dr. Device demos via brian comnes:
"this is one Ableton clip processed 5 ways

organ is Kjaerhaus Spectra pre-set
drums are microtonic
all clips run thru kjaerhaus MPL master limiter

clips are
clean - organ and drums no plugs
dr device on organ only
dr device on drums only
dr device on both drum and organ

last but not least I put Audiu Damages other plug in Replicant on the organ and dr device on drums and let it run for 64 bars so you could hear replicant pusnhing the organ clip around

have fun

Peace
Brian "



KORG RADIAS DEMO "Endorphins"


YouTube via gattobus.
"The song played in this video is a remake of the Access Virus b factory demo, "Endorphins". All played with Korg Radias in real time."

The Simmons Drum Book

via this auction.

"This is 104 great pages of great pictures and information about all the unique drums and products by Simmons!"

Slemar Clavioline Concertmaster

via this auction. BTW, if you are even considering picking this up, read this post including the comments, and be careful with those caps! Also more info here.

Oberheim 2 Voice

Title link takes you to shots via this auction. BTW, this appears to be a re-listing with new shots.
"Oberheim 2 Voice, Serial # 0404. This very rare synth was built in 1975, I purchased it a few months ago, and had just been professionally serviced, everything works and sounds great. See for yourself in the links below. 2 voice means that this synth is polyphonic, 2 VCO's per SEM module, the modules can be triggered together for 4 oscillators at once, or split so that either the left or right module will trigger first. Each oscillator has 2 knobs, one stacked on top of the other allowing for a qick or fine tune of the frequencies. There is some cosmetic wear on the exterior of the case, slight rust on the corner guards and some light scratches typical of an antique such as this."


Oberheim 2 Voice demo 1 Oberheim 2 Voice Sequencer Demo Oberheim 2 voice test part 2 YouTubes via Hobbs360.

1973 Univox Mini-Korg


Click here for shots via this auction. Be sure to check them out full size. These are some nice shots.

"This Synthesizer is one of the first monophonic keyboards from the early 70's. It was made by Keio Electronic Laboratories (KORG) and was distributed in the United States by Unicord under the Univox name. This is a 3 octave keyboard, single oscillator unit with controls for volume, attack, percussion, depth, wave shape, chorus, in addition to switches for expand, bright, sustain, bender, and repeat. There are additional controls for the repeat circuit, the vibrato, depth and speed, and the portamento as well as overall pitch. There is also a modulator called traveler with 2 slide controls. The rear panel has 2 outputs designated low and high, and the power cord tucks away behind a panel on the rear of the unit."

MOOG Minimoog

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

"On the back it reads Mini Moog Synthesizer Model D, Moog Music Inc. Buffalo NY. Assy. JB 8-28-78 / Insp. 31/8/5 S/N/ M-10677."

Sequential Circuits Prophet 5

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Prophet-5 (Serial # 4985)

Yamaha DD-14 Digital Drum Machine

via this auction. I love the look of this.
"The drums have a variety of beats and patterns are fully programable and have full midi so they can be incorporated into almost any set up and remotely trigger sounds via midi. There are eight individual pads and a sliding scrapper function that creates a unique ribbon control like synthesizer."

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Splice 404 Page

Title link takes you to the best 404 page ever. via Music Thing.
For the archives: spoiler: here's an image of what was on it when I put this post up.

tapete


YouTube via BoiaUniversallis.
"música pelos pés / music through feet smartjoy interface; dance mat; junxion; live 6"

Sacré bleu!... TD live in Paris in 1973

via The Archive Plus where you will find everything Tangerine Dream.

EMS Synthi

Model 15 Calibration procedure


YouTube via petergrenader.
"A step by step audio/visual guideline which details the proper procedure for calibrating your M15' to 1V/oct tracking."

Mighty Boosh Season 2 Episode 2 Priest and the Beast 1 of 3


YouTube via pradera. Sent my way via Ben Shannon.

worrydream - Bret Victor's website

Title link takes you to worrydream, Bret Victor's website. Bret created the synthesis engine for the ION, Micron and Fusion.

via mhz

Triadex Muse Sample



Sample of the Triadex Muse sent into AH via Scott. Posted here with permission. Big thanks to Scott. This is the first time I've heard one. Note the Triadex Muse is considered to be the first digital synth. It was produced in 1972. One is also featured as a prop in the movie Brainstorm staring Christopher Walken. You can find more info on the Muse via the Triadex (Muse) link below as with all posts. You can download the mp3 of the above here or here.


Click on the MORE Triadex (Muse) link directly below for more posts on the Triadex Muse.

Buchla 200e-12

The inside of a Buchla 200e case. Title link takes you to more shots. Looks like it and a Neuron VS are for sale.
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