MATRIXSYNTH: Search results for E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer


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Showing posts sorted by date for query E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Thursday, May 10, 2018

E-Mu Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer SN 19301127 + RAM Card

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"This is the E-mu Morpheus with the optional 'Morpheus Expanded Model #9200' data card (this card alone, when even available, sells on eBay for $125-150).

This is the synthesizer from e-mu with the z-plane morphing filters everyone desires.
It is in excellent condition - I am the original owner - it has been in the rack in my smoke-free studio since purchase. In spite of being rack-mounted all this time, please notice that the rack ears are in almost pristine condition (see pictures).

The Morpheus has its claim to fame with the ability to "morph" sounds creating unique, evolving and intricate sounds with superb digital clarity. The Morpheus uses Z-Plane synthesis and filters. These are 14-pole filters that model and interpolate resonant sound characteristics. In other words, you can morph between different sounds and vary the balance of the morph between these sounds. Go from analog drones that fade into high strings, for example."

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

E-MU MORPHEUS Z-Plane SYNTHESIZER

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via this auction

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Best Ambient Synth Shootout #32: E-MU Morpheus - Song 3


Christian's Sonic Spaces
Published on Aug 10, 2017

"Another E-MU Morpheus song ;-) It's a Z-Plane Synthesizer which has an unique filter morphing technology that can create organic spacy sounds. So it's good for ambient too ;-)"

Wednesday, August 02, 2017

Best Ambient Synth Shootout #31: E-MU Morpheus - Song 2


Christian's Sonic Spaces
Published on Aug 2, 2017

"Another E-MU Morpheus song ;-) It's a Z-Plane Synthesizer which has an unique filter morphing technology that can create organic spacy sounds. So it's good for ambient too ;-)

I used for the recording the following FX chain:
Morpheus - Elektron Analog Heat - EarthQuaker Devices Afterneath - TC Electronic Mimiq - Pigtronix Echolution 2 Deluxe - DigiTech Polara. The used fx varied depending on the recorded track.

The signal goes via a small Behringer mixer straight into the pc.

To create the complete song I recorded consecutively several stereo tracks. The final song was then mastered with just a bit EQ and compression on some tracks and some limiting on the master track.

Well, I decided to go back to the basics, but at the same time make something useful for the synth community and do a kind of competition (I like competitions;-). What's my best synth for ambient music :-)"

Monday, May 15, 2017

E-mu Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"The E-mu Morpheus was an innovative machine at the time of its release in 1993. The big news was the introduction of its "z-plane" filters, that had the capability of "changing smoothly their function" over time. This translates in superb synth sweeps, sci-fi swoops, alien soundscapes, human voice emulations, and lots more.

The Morpheus contains 8MB of 16-bit samples as the starting points for its sounds. There are 197 (!) filters to choose from, and many of these are truly phenomenal.

There are three banks of 128 sounds, and an optional data card. The hyperpresets allow you to stack or split up to 32 sounds in a patch - very powerful. A bit hidden in the MidiMap there are also 28 effects, including reverb, delay, chorus, phaser and flanger. Other features include three sets of stereo outputs, user definable alternate tuning, and extensive MIDI implementation"

Thursday, March 09, 2017

E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

Thursday, March 02, 2017

Rossum-Electro Morpheus Demos via Control


Published on Feb 17, 2017 Control Synthesizers & Electronic Devices

More Info: https://www.ctrl-mod.com/collections/...

Playlist:
Rossum-Electro Morpheus — Part 1: Introduction & Overview
Rossum Electro Morpheus — Part 2: Exploring the Cube
Rossum Electro Morpheus — Part 3: Filter Sequencer

Video Credentials:
Sonic Scenarios for Control
http://sonicscenarios.com

With our MORPHEUS ​digital filter module, we’re finally able to unleash the full power of the 14-pole Z­-Plane Filters that Dave invented for the E-mu Morpheus synthesizer.

The MORPHEUS Eurorack module includes over 190 filter configurations. Each configuration is composed of up to 8 complex filters that you can picture as being at the corners of a three dimensional cube. Morpheus gives you the ability to smoothly interpolate between those 8 filters within the cube’s three dimensional space.

Due to processor limitations back in the day, the original Morpheus was capable of real-time morphing in one dimension, but interpolation in the frequency and transform dimensions were set at note-on and remained static for the remainder of the note. But even with that limitation, Morpheus offered sonic capabilities that are unmatched to this day.

With the MORPHEUS filter module, you now have simultaneous real-time CV control of all three dimensions, for dynamic timbral effects unlike anything you’ve ever heard before. In stereo.

Friday, February 10, 2017

E-MU MORPHEUS - Insanity 3 【Synthesizer Sci-Fi Ambient Soundtrack】


Published on Feb 10, 2017 oscillator

"This is a third and final part of Insanity Trilogy. I used the same setup as in both previous parts - just a single E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane synthesizer with sequencer (K2000) and MIDI keyboard. No additional synths, samplers or external FX processors used. Everything you hear comes directly from Audio-outs of the Morpheus. To hear the full range of frequencies please use headphones. I hope you will find this soundtrack enjoyable :)"

All parts here.

Thursday, September 01, 2016

Rossum Electro-Music Morpheus Display Update


via @RossumElectro

"Closing in on the main Morpheus display. New level meters and indicators for the new variable distortion function."

How cool is that?

For those that don't know, the Rossum Electro-Music Morpheus is a eurorack module containing the Z-Plane filters of the E-Mu morpheus rackmount synthesizer.

Tuesday, August 09, 2016

E-mu Ultra Proteus Vintage Model 9060 Rack mount Synthesizer W Z-Plane Filters

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

SN 059503018

via this auction

"The Ultra Proteus contains the same 32 Z-plane 14-pole digital filters found in the Morpheus and contains 288 different filters in ROM. Its sound set is based on the Proteus 1, 2 and 3 plus the Pro/Formance piano module. It can store patches on a 256kbyte Type I PCMCIA SRAM card and uses a standard CR2032 3V lithium battery for its memory backup. It is powered by a 25 MIPS Motorola 68020 processor.

Six ROM cards were released containing new presets but no additional waveform data. These cards were produced:

9211 Proteus 1, 2, 3
9212 Expressive Orchestra
9213 Real World
9214 Dance/Techno
9215 General MIDI
9216 Trance Track

Specifications

Year Released: 1994
Polyphony: 32 notes
Multitimbral: 16 parts
Preset Patches: 640
User Patches: 128
ROM: 16MB (470 waveforms) at 16-bit, 39 kHz
Screen: 16 x 2 character LCD
Power Consumption: 25 watts
Dimensions: 19 in. x 8.5 in. x 1.75 in.
Weight: 3.1 kg"

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

Thursday, March 03, 2016

E-mu Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

Monday, February 15, 2016

E-MU MORPHEUS song - Insanity 2 【Synth Demo & Soudscapes】


Published on Feb 15, 2016 oscillator

"This track is a sequel to the Insanity. Same like in first part, it contains some bizarre and disturbing soundscapes which are made entirely on the E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane synthesizer. No samples, other synths or FX processors used, only single Morpheus with external sequencer. Recorded directly from Audio Outputs of the Morpheus. Headphones are highly recommended. Enjoy this digital nightmire :)"

Friday, January 08, 2016

E-Mu Going Eurorack Under Rossum Electro-Music



If you click the image and zoom in, to the left of the Tiptop Z3000 you should see what looks like a eurorack E-MU module. It has the classic E-Mu modular knobs as the original system in the background. The image was shared by Dave Rossum of E-Mu himself. Hopefully we will know more soon.

Update in via Soviet Space Child (Evolution filter module further below):

Update2: pics and details on additional modules added.

"The Evolution of EVOLUTION

The fundamental core of the Rossum Electro-Music EVOLUTION Variable Character Filter is Bob Moog’s famous “ladder” filter, which was described in US Patent 3,475,623. This circuit uses the variation of the Bipolar Junction Transistor’s emitter resistance with current as the voltage variable element in an RC filter. In the Moog implementation, four identical stages each implemented a single real lowpass pole. The Moog 904A module included a “Regeneration” control that created a negative feedback path around the four poles. Since each pole provided 45 degrees of phase shift at its -3dB point, increasing this feedback produced a resonant peak at cutoff. The musical utility of the Moog filter is, of course, famous.

In 1973, E-mu Systems introduced their 1100 submodule, which was the heart of their 2100 lowpass filter module. The 1100 used a Moog ladder as its core element, but I wanted to isolate the innate audio characteristics of the filter ladder from those colorations resulting from the input level-shifters and output amplifier used in the Moog 904A. I also envisioned a DC-coupled design with a cutoff frequency range well beyond 10 octaves, as well as eliminating variations of the height of the resonant peak or oscillation amplitude with frequency control voltage.

I level-shifted the exponential generator to allow the filter signal input to be directly applied to the ladder base. I then designed a completely new output stage for the ladder; this circuit has never (to our knowledge) been used outside my designs. The entire signal path was DC coupled and the resonant feedback path phase compensated. The 1100 was my favorite filter (I liked it more than the SSM2040 I later invented, and kept the 1100 as E-mu’s modular lowpass in preference to a cheaper 2040 design). The operational range of the cutoff frequency was from about 0.1Hz to 25kHz, with stable Q’s throughout.

In launching Rossum Electro-Music, I chose a new implementation of the 1100 filter as the first all-analog module for our Eurorack offering, based on its unique and outstanding audio characteristics. I re-engineered the basic 1100 core using modern available surface-mount components and then added a number of features to the original 1100 design:

Ladder filters self-oscillate, and can be used as VCOs. I was able to design the Rossum Electro EVOLUTION’s frequency control exponential generator to be extremely accurate and temperature stable, rivaling the specifications of the best analog VCOs. I also added a novel temperature compensation circuit for the ladder emitter resistance.

The resonance (“Q”) of the original 1100 was not voltage controlled. I implemented voltage controlled Q using one cell of an SSM2164 VCA (sadly, the original 2164 is no longer produced, so a replica source is needed). Since the SSM2164 is based on my 1979 design of the SSM2010, this is an apt choice. The phase compensation has been maintained, but we added a “Q Compensation” control. The negative feedback resonance path in the 1100, like the Moog 904A, caused the amplitude of signals in the passband to be attenuated as the Q increased, which some users found undesirable. If instead the signal is inserted into the Q VCA, this effect is eliminated. In EVOLUTION, the Q Compensation control allows insertion of the signal with an arbitrary mix into either of these inputs, allowing the ratio of direct to resonant amplitude to be arbitrarily selected.

There is no inherently desirable taper for Q control. In highly resonant, but oscillation-proof filters such as state variable designs, it makes sense to exponentially control Q. But in ladder filters, oscillation is expected, and high Q’s without oscillation are not practically achievable. The Rossum Electro EVOLUTION implements linear control of the Q VCA.

The ladder design, as I implemented it, has no inherent distortion for signals far below the cutoff frequency. The characteristic timbre of the filter comes primarily from distortions of frequencies near and above the cutoff frequency. The degree of distortion depends on the signal amplitude. Consequently, it is sonically interesting to modulate the signal amplitude going into the ladder, and modulate the output signal with the precise inverse gain. This is the function of the Species control. A high voltage into the Species input will cause the filter to distort more audibly.

Because ladder filters produce their resonance by feedback, the relationship of that feedback to the drive VCAs is critical. The Rossum Electro EVOLUTION places the Q feedback within the drive VCAs. This means that the filter’s resonance is unaffected by the Species setting, but that the amplitude of any self-oscillation will be inversely proportional to the Species level. When using the filter as an oscillator, the Species control can be used to amplitude modulate the output. If oscillation is combined with an input signal, the results become even more interesting. Like the Q circuit, SSM 2164 cells are used for the drive VCAs.

With these additions, the preliminary design of EVOLUTION looked pretty complete. Then Marco asked if it would be possible to add voltage controlled slope (those marketing guys are never satisfied). My first take was that this would not be practical, because varying the slope usually involves controlling complex pole pairs, and the ladder comprises only real poles.

Then I realized that I could steer the current around individual ladder stages in an analog manner, controlling the number of poles rather than the slope. A prototype proved this was both practical and audibly pleasing. Since the resonant frequency of a ladder filter is determined by the 180 degree phase shift point, it changes with the number of poles: 60 degrees for three poles, 45 for four, 36 for five, and 30 degrees for six poles. Modulating the number of poles produces a unique 'bubbly' sound.

Two more tweaks were needed to complete the circuit. Because the number of poles not only affects the phase shift for resonance, it also changes the amount of feedback required for oscillation, the pole control circuit needs to control the Q VCA in a manner such that the same Q control voltage produces oscillation for each pole setting. And since it’s useful but difficult to tune the initial pole setting to be in the center of the range (exactly steering the current to the desired ladder poles), I added analog controlled LEDs to indicate the activation of the poles."


The Evolution filter module appears to be the module in the image above.

"EVOLUTION is Dave’s updated take on his classic enhancement of Bob Moog’s iconic ladder filter.

At the core of EVOLUTION is Dave’s unique implementation of the Moog ladder filter from the original E-mu Systems 2100 LPF module (which, incidentally, Dave counts as his favorite of all of the analog filters he designed).

For EVOLUTION, Dave has designed new capabilities that not only allow users to dial in all of the outstanding qualities of the original 2100, but combine to let them create the sonic characteristics of a wide variety of other filter types. They include:

– A Genus control that allows continuous voltage control of the number of filter poles (from 3 to 6 poles), essentially allowing real-time variation of Evolution’s effective cutoff slope from 18dB/oct to 36dB/oct. LEDs give continuous indication of the current slope.

– A Species control that allows voltage control of the signal level into Evolution’s unique distortion circuitry.

– Voltage controlled resonance with a variable Q Level Compensation control that controls of the balance of the resonant signal and the frequencies below the cutoff frequency (which would otherwise be attenuated as the resonance is increased).

– An extremely accurate and temperature-stable frequency control exponential generator, rivaling the specifications of the best analog VCOs.Taken together, EVOLUTION gives everything from the platonic ideal of the classic ladder filter to an almost unlimited variety of alternative filter characteristics."


Details on the Control Forge & Morpheus Z-Plane Filter (from the E-Mu Morpheus rackmount synth):


Control Forge

Programmable Universal CV Generator

CONTROL FORGE is hard to describe briefly, as it’s unlike anything else available in Eurorack (or pretty much anywhere). The core functionality is drawn from the E-mu Morpheus’s insanely powerful (but hard to program on a two-line display) Function Generators. But now expanded into a supremely flexible modulation source encompassing elaborate one-shot contours, evolving cyclical patterns and sequences of arbitrary length and complexity.

– At its most basic, it’s an 8-stage function generator with variable time and target voltage level for each stage.

– Each stage’s level can be defined either absolutely or relative to the ending level of the previous stage and can optionally be quantized to the nearest 1/12 volt.

– Each stage’s level may have a user defined range of randomness of either linear or gaussian distribution.

– The time scale may be modulated under CV control or manually via the encoder during runtime.

– There are 191 different transition shapes between stages (indicated graphically on the display during selection), from linear and exponential shapes to various flavors of random, chaotic, and many more that don’t lend themselves to one-word descriptions, including the ability to pass CVs directly through to the output for individual stages.

– Also included are “DC” shapes that allow the module to be used as a sequencer with all of the module’s available programmability. When combined with the Preset Sequencer described below, sequences can be hundreds of steps long and modified in real time manually or by CVs.

– Each stage may optionally have a conditional jump mode that results in a jump to another selected stage if a particular condition is met. E.g., a CV being above or below the selected conditional value, the presence or lack of a gate or logic high at their respective inputs, rising or falling edges at the inputs, etc. So, in addition to one-shot shapes, extremely elaborate cyclical patterns can be programmed that evolve based on the various conditional inputs.

– Two independent triggers can be programmed to fire in response to a variety of events and can be used to affect either CONTROL FORGE itself or external modules.

– Hundreds of presets can be saved and recalled

– A preset sequencer allows stepping through user defined series of presets under trigger or clock control. This allows contours and sequences of almost unlimited length and complexity.

– All presets and sequences can be transferred to any number of CONTROL FORGE SATELLITES."


Morpheus Stereo Morphing Z-Plane Filter

With our MORPHEUS ​digital filter module, we’re finally able to unleash the full power of the 14-pole Z­-Plane Filters that Dave invented for the E-mu Morpheus synthesizer.

Due to processor limitations back in the day, the original Morpheus was capable of real-time morphing between filter configurations, but interpolation in the frequency and transform dimensions were set at note-on and remained static for the remainder of the note. But even with that limitation, Morpheus offered sonic capabilities that are unmatched to this day.

With our new MORPHEUS filter module, you get simultaneous real-time CV control of all three dimensions, for dynamic timbral effects unlike anything you’ve ever heard before.

MORPHEUS features include:

– Over 190 14-pole filter configurations

– Real-time manual and CV control of Frequency, Morphing and Transformation

– The ability to save hundreds of customized filter configurations

– A sequencer for stepping through filter configurations under trigger or clock control

– A large OLED display for programming and realtime display of morphing

Like all Rossum Electro-Music digital modules, all parameters are available for adjustment with a single button press. No menu diving."


"SATELLITE is a compact 12HP module that can be loaded with all of the presets and preset sequences from a Control Forge and then function as a completely stand-alone CV generator. Once the presets and preset sequences are transferred from the Control Forge (via a patch cord connection), SATELLITE no longer requires any connection to a Control Forge.

With one or more SATELLITES, Control Forge owners can take advantage of all of their presets and sequences in multiple cabinets or even different systems

Multiple SATELLITE can be programmed from the same Control Forge and synced together via their Gate inputs to create complex polyphonic sequences and modulation contours.

SATELLITE will be available this spring from Rossum Electro-Music dealers worldwide."

Friday, November 06, 2015

E-Mu Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer with Film Score Composer Model #9201 Card

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via this auction

Monday, June 22, 2015

E-MU MORPHEUS song - Insanity (synth demo & soundscapes)


Published on Jun 13, 2015 oscillator

"And now something different. This track contains some bizarre and disturbing soundscapes and shows the real power of the E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane synthesizer. No samples, other synths or FX processors used, only single Morpheus with external sequencer. Recorded directly from Audio Outputs of the Morpheus. Headphones are highly recommended. Enjoy! (if you dare...)"

Monday, February 23, 2015

E-MU Morpheus Z-Plane Rackmount Synthesizer SN 129301131

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

Filter morphing heaven. "Z-Plane Synthesizer rackmount module with ASIC chips to deliver sweepable parametric 14-pole digital filter 'cubes' (the Z-plane filter). The Z-Plane filter is composed of up to eight complex filters that model and interpolate resonant sound characteristics."

Click here for a search on previous posts, including demos.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

E-MU MORPHEUS Z-Plane Synthesizer sounds


Published on Jan 10, 2015 oscillator

"Z-Plane Synthesizer rackmount module with ASIC chips to deliver sweepable parametric 14-pole digital filter "cubes" (the Z-plane filter). The Z-Plane filter is composed of up to eight complex filters that model and interpolate resonant sound characteristics.

In this demo track you can hear some single notes, chords and sequences to give you a conception about Z-Plane filter synthesis possibilities of this legendary machine."

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

E-Mu Systems Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer - A Guided Tour - VHS

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated.

via this auction

"running time : approximately 35 minutes

Come along as the Morphmeister himself, Gerry Basserman, takes you on a guided tour of E-Mu's revolutionary Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer. Learn about what makes Morphus special and how to get the most out of your Morpheus."

I don't think I knew this even existed.  I'm not finding it on YouTube. If anyone pics this up or has it and pops it up somewhere, let us know.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

E-Mu Morpheus Z-Plane Synthesizer Demo Video


Published on Sep 19, 2013 stuthomson·15 videos

"My patches on the E-Mu Morpheus. Released in 1994. Ballsy. The internal Z-Plane architecture (with 14-pole filters) enables you to make an insane number of sounds and morph in real time using a mod wheel. Back in the day, people bought it to do studio groove, funk acid dance. I hated that sh*t. I use it for rich orchestra, strings and ambient sound patches. No external effects were used in this recording."

E-Mu Morpheus on eBay
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