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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Hispasonic. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Interview with Mutable Instrument's Olivier Gillet

The following interview is by Juan Vílchez Gómez for Hispasonic. Juan sent it my way via The MATRIXSYNTH Lounge. You can find a Spanish version on Hispasonic here. The following interview is posted here in English with permission from Juan. MATRIXSYNTH gets a mention! Thank you to Juan and Hispasonic!

"Hispasonic: This time we are talking with Olivier Gillet, the man behind Mutable Instruments and creator of the famous synth Shruthi-1. He reveals exciting information about his next projects and throws light upon synth design.

JuanVilchez is the interviewer.

Hispasonic: Well... Taking into account that the key questions about the Shruthi-1 have been already answered in the forums, or in the comprehensive documentation of your webpage, I propose that you could speak us about the future of Mutable Instruments... as it seems that some exciting new machines are in the making right now.

Mutable: The exciting new projects:

Next project (september/october): the MIDIpal, a small, inexpensive, MIDI processing
unit, running algorithmic transformation on the MIDI notes (arpeggiation, harmonization, delays) along with more traditional filter/splitter/monitoring things. Something you'll want to stick between anything with a keyboard and anything with an audio out in your studio :) This is the first project that will be industrially manufactured - though the first batch will be available as a SMT kit.

A revision of the Shruthi-1 hardware for the next batches of kits - in particular I've spent quite some time cutting the part count on the filter board.

A new Shruthi-1 filter board (MS-20 clone).

A variant of the Shruthi-1 digital board that will replace all the digital oscillators by 12-
bits sample playback from a SD card (and will probably do sampling too). This will add a new dimension to the "Shruthi-system" = 3 "controller boards" (Shruthi, Sidekick, Sampler) x 7 "filter boards".

Something that will replace, in the long run, the Shruthi-1 - and in which I'm trying to address most of the shortcomings and design decisions of the Shruthi-1. This is a more ambitious, risky, project as I'm trying to squeeze in a lot of very new features, and design it in such a way that some parts of the project can be interchanged, with both a SMT version for industrial manufacturing and still a through- hole variant for DIYers. While avoiding reinventing too much and keeping it close to the Shruthi sound. Ready in 6 months? 1 year? I don't know.

Least sexy but most important thing: establishing an actual company -- at the moment what I do is registered as a "side-business" and while it is very simple paperwork-wise, it adds many constraints to what I can and cannot do, and exposes me to many risks in case of bankruptcy.

Hispasonic: I think that it could be interesting not only promoting Mutable Instruments but you as well, as I find that you're a really talented guy and that you've the most valuable opinions and tastes. Just saying... I perceive that you're a shy person (am I wrong?), but maybe it could be interesting to know more about "the creator".

Olivier: I wouldn't see the point of promoting myself - I don't sell myself, I sell synths, and they can "speak" or rather "sound" for themselves!
Many interesting synthesizer businesses are small, quite often run by one single person, who has to wear both an engineering and marketing hat. Personally, I try to keep my engineering hat as much as possible because this is what I am good at, and because I quite like the values that goes with engineering. Chips datasheets don't cheat, at least not on the first page... I see too much people overhyping stuff in my daily job to want to do anything like that when I am working on my synth projects.

Hispasonic: In Hispasonic we are really proud of our community of synth enthusiasts. Here is a little "window" that is going to be seen by a lot of people. Taking a look into your resumé, we know that we can confidently trust you in regard to software and electronic musical instruments. So... what do you want to say to them?

Olivier: If there had something I had to say to the synth public is that they should try to keep a critical eye and ear when looking at synths - there are so many misconceptions (that I used to have too, until recently!) about synths. Things like:
- "UIs with LCD displays / pages [as opposed to 'one knob per function'] suck" Most people having used the Shruthi-1 agree that the interface is very easy to understand. The ESQ-1 looks horrible with only one data entry slider but it's surprisingly very fast to program. While some knob-laden VAs are horrible to use because everything not directly in the front panel might be hidden behind half a dozen of keypresses.
- "8-bits => chiptune sounds!"
Just because something uses 8-bit resolution somewhere in the signal chain doesn't make it sound like a Nintendo. It's not all black and white: The Fairlight had 8-bit converters ; the Dark Energy uses a sound chip that found its way in some 80s arcade machines. And plenty of other weird combinations inbetween.
- "Vintage synths got their good sound from the vintage VCF chips"
I was fooled by this too, and this is why I invested time in getting some of those chips and building filters with them. My conclusion is that those chips were very convenient because they concentrated many useful functions in a small area (and thus made reliable, smaller polysynths possible), but there's nothing magical in them - gain cells and linear/exponential voltage->current converters in one small package. I won't bother with those things from the past in new designs, because the magic is outside of the chip.
- "Stuff designed by amateurs will always be one step behind commercial products"
I hang around a few DIY online communities (for example the SDIY mailing list) and I am amazed by the expertise and knowledge of the people here. And then it struck me that to the most talented electrical engineers it would be a weird career move to actually work full-time on synths, because there are many other fun things to do with their skills. Somehow I think the most difficult thing for a trained EE to go into making synths would not be the challenge of the work, but the challenge of only applying a very small fraction of their knowledge of the field.

Hispasonic: There is a growing community of people that decide to take direct control and create their own synths from the electronic parts (DIY). Any advice for them?

Olivier: A last thing, and this takes the form of a question: "what makes a good synth/DIY project?". To me, three things:

Understanding the difference between a "project" and a "product"
It took 2 to 3 months to design something like the Shruthi from A to Z.
At this stage you'll have something awesome that you can put in a box, use yourself, post a video to Matrixsynth and be very proud of. But then it will take maybe 5 or 6 months to turn it into a "product", to sort unsexy things like documentation, sound banks, testing on a variety of setups, parts sourcing and validation, more field testing, feature requests from beta testers, etc.
I had changing opinions about whether oscillators, filters, modulations, etc. were the most important element to define the "sound of the synth". In the end, my view on that is that what makes a synth good is the presence, or not, of a "vision" or "plot" about how it should sound like, and then the effort made to ensure that every module contributes to this vision and goes in the right direction.
This is why I believe "design by committees" efforts like the Tyrell from Amazona are a bad idea - "just making the majority happy" is not the sort of vision to build something upon. At least not in arts.
When the designer of a synth has never taken the time to actually listen to its creation, it shows!

Hispasonic: Thank you very much Olivier for some of your time - we know that you are really busy these days - and for really getting involved in the topics treated. We do know that you are not very enthusiastic about being interviewed or talking about your products, as you completely trust on their sound as their best marketing campaign. We can’t wait to hear and play with your last creations. They will give us plenty to talk about, for sure."

Useful links:
Mutable Instruments
Shruthi-1 on Youtube
Shruthi-1 audio demos on Soundcloud
Contact the interviewer:
me@juanvilchez.com http://www.juanvilchez.com

Monday, October 31, 2011

Barcelona Synth Event Videos by Hispasonic

Un paseo por la concentración de analógicos

YouTube Uploaded by Hispasonic on Oct 31, 2011

"Completamos nuestra cobertura de la concentración de analógicos del pasado 15 de octubre con un vistazo completo a los maravillosos sintes que se podían contemplar allí."

Googlish: "We completed our coverage of the concentration of analog on 15 October with a comprehensive look at the wonderful feeling that he could look there."

Befaco.org: sintes hechos en casa

Uploaded by Hispasonic on Oct 31, 2011

"Befaco.org es una asociación que promueve la construcción de instrumentos electrónicos por parte de los propios músicos. Diego de León, uno de sus responsables, presenta su sinte modular y habla de sus talleres y actividades."

Googlish: "Befaco.org is an association that promotes the construction of electronic instruments from the musicians themselves. Diego de Leon, one of its leaders, presents its modular synth and talks about her workshops and activities."

Los sintes de Tolaemon

Friday, February 12, 2010

NAMM: AKAI iPK25, MPD8 y LPK25


YouTube via Hispasonic. The SynthStation25 comes in at 1:31. Note the iPhone sits on an anti-slip pad vs plugging into it. The connection is wireless.
"Presentación de los minicontroladores de AKAI y del sistema para iPhone iPK25. Recuerda que los vídeos de Hispasonic se ven con mejor calidad en www.hispasonic.com, y siempre se publican allí días antes que en Youtube."

Monday, September 29, 2014

Rob Papen Reveals New Synthesizer - RAW


Rob Papen nos muestra Punch-BD y la beta de Raw Published on Sep 29, 2014 Hispasonic

"http://www.hispasonic.com - Rob Papen nos enseña Punch-BD, el sinte de bombos que os presentamos hace unos días (http://www.hispasonic.com/noticias/ro...). Raw es un sintetizador de sonidos distorsionados que aún no ha salido al mercado."

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Hispasonic Nebula Reverb (and More) - Free


"Nebula is a wonderful "FX gear emulator" VST plugin for Windows from Acustica Audio, based on Volterra Kernels Series. It emulates different types of vintage gear: equalisers, filters, microphones, preamps, compressors, reverb and generic time-variant processors (chorus, flangers, phasers).

Nebula HS Reverb (Hispasonic Edition) is a free version of Nebula with 18 exclusive reverb presets made by Jorge Ruiz, commemorating the new look of Hispasonic.com, the biggest website and community around musical creation & production in spanish. Here you can download it for free!

We have also published a quick tutorial in spanish for Nebula HS Reverb. Here you have the Google-translated version."

Title link takes you there. via CDM.

Friday, April 10, 2015

Monofiletico - DSI Evolver for Monocontest by ElektroNoiser


Published on Apr 10, 2015 ElektroNoiser

"This is a work made entirely with synth DSI Evolver, on 6 tracks recorded in Nuendo, compression and reverb hardware, native EQ in Nuendo.

[note the two links below aren't working on YouTube so I couldn't add them here]

Track made for Monocontest of Hispasonic.com:
Bases:
www.hispasonic.com/noticias/monoco…onofo­nico/40336

Other participants:
www.hispasonic.com/foros/monoconte…322#p­ost4084316

Down this Wav:
https://soundcloud.com/elektronoiser/..."

DSI Evolvers on eBay

Tuesday, October 07, 2014

El sistema modular de Tip Top Audio


Published on Oct 7, 2014 Hispasonic

"http://www.hispasonic.com - Tip Top Audio es una empresa norteamericana que fabrica sintes modulares. En Dancefair Ibiza tenían uno de sus sistemas montados, y pudimos echarle un buen vistazo."

Monday, April 02, 2007

Musikmesse Superbooth - Hispasonic.com


YouTube via Hispasonic.

Sunday, January 03, 2021

Arturia Polybrute (no talking + free soundbank)


Hispasonic

Sound list:

00:00 Intro
00:16 HugeBrute
01:08 Italian Harp
01:26 Split Vienna
01:40 Oxygenate Lead
02:03 Morphee Leads
02:45 Analog Split
03:25 Bach Horn
03:40 Bach Reed
03:54 Back to Berlin
04:22 Chordal Moods
05:10 Instant Mood
05:38 NewRonyum 82
07:28 HispasonicWLove
08:03 Clean warm lead
08:40 Seq & Solo Twins
09:28 SeqArpChords

Download link: http://www.hispasonic.com/polybrute-s...

Wednesday, January 08, 2014

Presentación de Yamaha MOXF


Published on Jan 8, 2014 Hispasonic·161 videos

"Aquí tenéis la presentación en vídeo del Yamaha MOXF que tuvo lugar a finales de noviembre en los locales de BoXinBoX en Madrid. Moira Muñoz y Pedro Dobón hacen un extenso recorrido por las funcionalidades y sonidos del nuevo workstation, y responden más de una docena de preguntas que los hispasónicos pudieron hacer en vivo, desde el chat de Hispasonic TV."

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

El sistema modular de Tip Top Audio


Published on Oct 7, 2014 Hispasonic

"http://www.hispasonic.com - Tip Top Audio es una empresa norteamericana que fabrica sintes modulares. En Dancefair Ibiza tenían uno de sus sistemas montados, y pudimos echarle un buen vistazo."

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Patchblocks, un minisinte modular programable


Published on Jun 14, 2014 Hispasonic·207 videos

"Sónar 2014 en http://www.hispasonic.com - Patchblocks es una especie de sintetizador modular formando por pequeños bloques que se conectan libremente entre sí y que pueden programarse para cumplir diversas funciones."


Googlish:
"Patchblocks is a kind of modular synth forming small blocks that connect freely with each other and can be programmed to perform a variety of functions."

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Los tres filtros del nuevo ARP Odyssey


Published on Jan 27, 2015 Hispasonic

"http://www.hispasonic.com - El relanzamiento del ARP Odyssey por Korg fue una de las sensaciones del NAMM. En este vídeo vemos una breve introducción y escuchamos el carácter de sus tres tipos de filtro, correspondientes a las tres revisiones que sufrió el original."

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Roland JU-06 a prueba


Published on Nov 10, 2015 Hispasonic

"http://www.hispasonic.com - Probamos uno de los tres minisintes Roland Boutique, el JU-06 —inspirado en el Juno original de los años 80—."

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Dave Smith Instruments Pro 2: ejemplos de sonido


Published on Dec 16, 2014 Hispasonic

"Demos de sonido que acompañan a nuestra review sobre el Dave Smith Insruments Pro 2, disponible aquí: http://www.hispasonic.com/reviews/mr-..."

Dave Smith Pro 2s on eBay

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Arguru, Fruity Loops Creator Dies in Accident

Sad day. Condolences to everyone close to him.

Translated via hispasonic.com:
"Arguru, virtual programmer of Image Line (FL Studio) and creator of sintes of DiscoDSP, passed away yesterday near Benalmádena (Malaga), in a car accident.

Yesterday Sunday 3 of June, to 18:45 hours, the car of Juan Antonio [left the road] in the AP-7, near Benalmádena (Malaga), despeñando themselves and ending its life. Its burial was celebrated Monday to 17:30 today, in the park cemetery of Malaga, company of its relatives and friends more close friends.

Arguru was [hispasónico nº 2,751], one of most veteran. He was [sworn of IV the Musical Battles], celebrated in the spring of 2004, and many moments, active participant of our forums.

But mainly,] the 19 of July of 2002, George was known to found the company [DiscoDSP along with Real. DiscoDSP is the person in charge of sintes as famous as [Discovery] and Vertigo. In [December of year 2002] we already gave account of one of his first products, NightShine.

Arguru was a great professional, who called the attention by the quality of his creations. Sintes of DiscoDSP is surely the perfected and powerful virtual instruments more of the market, without concessions in quality of sound.

The community to tracker will have without a doubt a great memory of Arguru thanks to [Aodix], secuenciador-tracker very powerful, that incorporated professional MIDI, support VST and other characteristics. ] Was also an important component of [Smartelectronix and the scene [Buzz].

In 2004,], the creative company of the famous FL Studio left DiscoDSP to give to the jump to [Image Line. Arguru had a great implication in the development of FL Studio 7; it created in addition sampler Directwave, and very recent [Deckadance], a software for DJs.

He was referring an absolute one of the small group of Spaniards who dedicate themselves professionally to the musical technology. Some we already remembered to him from the excited ones to char them of IRC-Hispanic. Arguru always emphasized by its seriousness and the deep knowledge of the synthesis and the programming.

A great loss, to an age in which nobody would have to leave this world. From we give to many spirits to family and friends him, and left to a sense memory for the brilliant Arguru here, to which we will never forget in Hispasonic."

via sequencer.de.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

NAMM 2013: Korg Mini MS-20 en acción

Published on Jan 31, 2013 Hispasonic·129 videos Hispasonic·129 videos

"Una demo del nuevo sinte analógico Korg Mini MS-20."

Some light demos of the patch panel in this one.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Demo del sintetizador analógico Vermona 14


Published on Jan 27, 2015 Hispasonic

"http://www.hispasonic.com - Echamos un vistazo al nuevo sintetizador analógico de Vermona, basado en los sintes Mono Lancet y Perfourmer."

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Sintes de Waldorf en la Musikmesse


YouTube via Hispasonic. Hispasonic.com

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Musikmesse Roland Gaia SH-1 en la Musikmesse 2010


YouTube via Hispasonic. More vids, details and comments enabled in this post.
"Roland está anunciando GAIA SH-1, un nuevo sintetizador con síntesis analógica virtual, inspirado en clásicos sintes de la empresa.

Dispone de tres motores de síntesis analógica virtual integrados, cada uno con componentes dedicados de filtro, oscilador, amplificador, envolvente y LFO. Ofrece la opción de agrupar hasta cinco efectos simultáneos, incluyendo distorsión, flanger, reverb, low boost y más.

http://www.hispasonic.com/noticias/nu..."
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