MATRIXSYNTH


Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Akai AX80

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

"Akai’s first venture into the synthesizer arena. Released in 1984 for $1,395 and later reduced to $999. The unit is mono-tambral eight voice with two DCO’s (plus a sub-osc) per voice. It features a 5 octave velocity sensitive keyboard with a nice amount of resistance. Velocity can be routed to control the filter cutoff and / or the VCA, and has a nice full range of 99 steps. A spring loaded pitch bend wheel and non spring loaded modulation wheel are at the base left on the keyboard (where they belong). The wheels parameters are global and are controlled by two knobs above the wheels. The pitch wheel has a maximum range of +/- 1 octave. The modulation wheel can control the oscillator modulation and/or filter modulation. The most interesting feature on the unit is its fluorescent display which details the parameter value of almost all parameters at once via bar graphs (only one envelope is displayed at a time). The display makes programming the unit a breeze and is very informative especially if your new to subtractive synthesis. Almost each parameter has its own switch (32 switches in all) and the parameter’s value is changed using a knob for large changes and membrane switches for +/- 1 increments. The know functions in real time so you can adjust a specific parameter as you play. In addition to the massive parameter display the unit also features a two digit and three digit L.E.D. which in edit mode displays the parameter selected for editing and its current value. When the unit is not in edit mode the unit displays the patch selected. The thirty two membrane switches are used to select the patch when the unit is not in edit mode. The unit holds three banks (A,B,P) of thirty two or 96 in total. And as you probably guess P stands for preset which are non volatile but the other 64 are volatile which is plenty of storage space. The display is one of the best on any synth I have ever seen or used. The voice parameter section is quite nice albeit fairly standard and makes some great sounds. The AX-80 uses CEM chips and has a two pole filter. Each voice is comprised of two oscillators with an additional sub oscillator, VCF (high pass and low pass), three LFO’s, and two envelopes. Note: The unit has only three LFO’s in total so each voice shares the LFO’s (see below). DCO 1 offers a frequency range of 16,8,and 4, choice of waveform between sawtooth, pulse width, and a mix of the two, pulse width control, pulse width modulation speed (which is controlled independently of the LFO!!!), and a sub oscillator which produces a square wave one octave below the frequency selected for osc 1. DCO 2 offers a frequency range at any half step interval between 16 and 2. In additional it may de-tuned +/- 36 steps to achieve a nice fat beating sounding when heard with osc 1. Osc. 2 offers sawtooth, square (no pulse width), and mix of the two. In addition osc 2 may be hard or soft synced to osc 1. Osc 2 pitch may be modulated by either envelope (note: the envelope may be inverted). Osc 2 may be modulated by LFO 2. Each oscillator offers it owns volume control for simple mixing. Its a shame that the mix can not be controlled by velocity or one of the envelopes. VCF. The AX uses a two pole filter. The filter is fine for leads, basses, sweeps, synth brass, etc. The filter parameters for filter cutoff, keyboard follow (99 steps), envelope depth (may be inverted), resonance, key velocity and high pass filter (which is non dynamic but 99 values are allowed). The resonance is nice and thick and the filter can self oscillate. The resonance has a bass boost circuit so the sound doesn’t fall out from underneath so quickly as it does on some other synths. When the filter is opened wide, the sound can be quite bright. LFO. The AX has three LFOs in total for all eight voice, however LFO 1 controls osc , LFO 2 controls osc 2, and LFO controls osc 3, which allows for some very nice effects. Its great for fat leads since each oscillator can be slightly detuned using different LFO amounts, and their is still one LFO left to modulate the filter. If you hold down a chord and play a lead on top, every time you play a new key, the LFO’s will re-trigger this affecting the held chord. Sometimes this type can be quite useful. I wish that you could select weather the LFO would re-trigger or not. The LFO section is a trade-off but is different from most other synths, so I view it as a positive since it allows me to do stuff I can’t do on other units. Each LFO has the following parameter: depth, delay, rate, waveform which include sawtooth, reverse sawtooth, square, and triangle. It would have been nice to also have sine and random. ENV. Two standard ADSR envelopes with key follow. Key follow has 99 values which is much better than off/half/on as found on some synths. One envelope is for the VCA, the other is for the filter. However the VCA envelope can be used for both the filter and the VCA (note: this is parameter 30 set to 2 (VCA-VCF mode), leaving the other envelope to modulate the pitch of osc 2. Either envelope may be used to modulate the pitch on osc 2. The AX has midi in / out / thru (wouldn’t it be nice if all synths had all three jacks opposed to the combination out/thru or worse no thru). At least the unit powers is always in POLY mode and you may select any channel to receive on. Interesting enough you may then select any channel to send on, and therefore these channels may be different. The save / load time is very quick and one of the most reliable I have used. A verify feature is provided. The back panel is angled upward making for easy access. The back pannel supports a ¼ mono output, headphone jack, sustain jack, program pedal (which can be used to change programs in an +1 upward manner), and midi jacks (as noted above). The unit also has a chord memory feature and the keyboard can be transposed upwards over a range of 11 semitones. A really good synth ... very good and different sounding. The sound reminds me a lot of the Chroma Polaris, and it couldn’t sound anything less like a Roland. I view these as positives and the AX was a welcome addition to my set up. Being different is what it is all about."

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Schematics via Mike Peake

Title link takes you to them. Be sure to click on the "All Sizes" link for each.

GX1 Ring Modulator
CS80 Ring Mod (pictured)
Tau VCA 5
Tau VCA 7
Tau VCA Layout
Tau VCA PCB
Polyfusion Octave Divider
MS20 Ring Modulator

Korg Electribe MX-1

flickr by Cron-Z.

click here for the full size shot.

Moogfest 2007 in NYC -- featuring the first annual Moogfest Symposium


"Featuring an all-star lineup from the world of Moog
Greetings from the Bob Moog Foundation!

We have been hard at work all summer as we work towards our mission to document, celebrate & teach innovative thinking. On September 22, 2007 we will be traveling to Moogfest, an annual NYC event celebrating the musical legacy that continues through the instruments that Bob created. Check out Moogfest at moogfest.com and if you live in the NYC area, please join us for this very special tribute!

The Bob Moog Foundation has partnered with Moogfest to create the first annual Moogfest Symposium. At the Symposium, which takes place at 8pm on Thursday September 20, 2007 at Columbia University, luminaries in the field of electronic music will gather to discuss Bob’s legacy as it pertains to their own work and they will be taking questions from the audience. Symposium panel members include:

Herbert Deutsch – collaborator on the development of the first Moog synthesizer; composer, musician and performer; twice Chair of the Music Department at Hofstra University and former Director of Sales and Marketing at Moog Music, Inc.

Gershon Kingsley – musician and composer who led the Moog Quartet, which performed around the country and at Carnegie Hall. Best known for his catchy melody “Popcorn”, which is part of his “Music to Moog By” album, Mr. Kinglsey has recorded many Moog Albums, including “The In Sound From Way Out” with Jean-Jaques Perry and his most recent addition “God is a Moog”.
Joel Chadabe – composer, performer and pioneer in the development of interactive music systems. Mr. Chadabe has had a lifelong career in academia and has lectured, performed and recorded extensively. He is currently Professor Emeritus at State University of New York at Albany; Director of the Computer Music Studio at Manhattan School of Music Visiting Faculty at New York University. Joel is the President of the Electronic Music Foundation and the author of “Electric Sound: The Past and Promise of Electronic Music.”

John Eaton – Avant garde opera composer and performer and Professor Emeritus of Music Composition at the University of Chicago, where he taught for 10 years. He also taught at Indiana University (Bloomington) for 20. Mr. Eaton is a McArthur Fellow who, over a 20 year collaboration with Dr. Moog, created the Eaton-Moog Multi-Touch Sensitive Keyboard. He currently serves as the Composer and Artistic Director for the Pocket Opera Players, based in New York City.

David Borden – musician, composer and performer; played and tested early Moog Modulars in Bob Moog’s studio in Trumansburg, NY. Founder of Mother Mallard’s Portable Masterpiece, the first Moog synthesizer ensemble. Retired Director of the Digital Music Program at Cornell University, where he taught for 37 years.

Trevor Pinch – Author of “Analog Days: The Invention and Impact of the Moog Syntheziser” and professor and Chairperson of Science and Technology Studies at Cornell Univeristy.

Moogfest and the Bob Moog Foundation are proud and honored to be
sponsoring an event that pulls together Bob’s lifelong friends and colleagues and the vast amount of experiences and knowledge that they share. This promises to be a very special evening.

Please join us at:

Center Room
3rd Floor, Prentis Hall
632 West 125th Street
Columbia University

For directions online, please see:
http://music.columbia.edu/cmc/contact/index.html

For those of you who live in the New York City area, we hope to see you at the Symposium and at Moogfest. We’ll be checking in with the rest of you to let you know how it all went.

Until then-
The Bob Moog Foundation"

Yamaha TENORI-ON via Making Sound

Title link takes you to a review in French, on Making Sound. Here's a link to a Google translated version.

"The random mode:

This mode makes it possible to spice its services with a little chance. While pressing on a button a note is played in a repetitive way. While pressing on a second, a light travels between the two by generating a sound with each time it meets one of them. While pressing on a third the light modifies its way again. In this manner it is possible this to create a musical “continuation” which it is even possible to make swivel on itself. Very interesting."

Sept 07

Ems synthi aks
serge modular
waldorf pulse
alesis andromeda a6
roland tr 606
xoxbox
elektron machinedrum
eurorack ( Plan b, livewire,cgs,doepfer)

flickr via cray5656
aka ghostdog.

John Bowen Solaris Pre-order information

"Pre-ordering is now available. The pre-order deposit amount is $1,000, which is roughly one-third of the final introductory price (expected to be $3,199). Pre-order deposits can be spread over 2 consecutive months with two $500 checks if needed. (Serial number list will be entered on the second payment.) A full refund of your deposit will be offered up to 3 weeks prior to shipping of your unit. Current plans for initial shipment of pre-orders is now mid-December."

Title link takes you there. via Davide.

MOTM behind the scenes

Title link takes you to more shots and details on My Synthesis Technology MOTM Analog Modular Synth.

Update via emeb in the comments:
"Hi - Thanks for posting that. Actually, it's not the lab at Synth Tech, but the MOTM demo table at AH Cali in Oakland on 9/9/07. In the front is the MOTM 520 Cloud Generator prototype. The 8x8 LED display in the back is part of an eval for the upcoming Lite Engine."

RIP Joe Zawinul

"VIENNA, Austria (AP) — Joe Zawinul, who soared to fame as one of the creators of jazz fusion and performed and recorded with Miles Davis, died early Tuesday, a hospital official said. He was 75.

Zawinul had been hospitalized since last month. A spokeswoman for Vienna's Wilhelmina Clinic confirmed his death without giving details. His manager, Risa Zincke, said Zawinul suffered from a rare form of skin cancer, according to the Austria Press Agency.

Zawinul won widespread acclaim for his keyboard work on chart-topping Davis albums such as "In A Silent Way" and "Bitches Brew," and was a leading force behind the so-called "Electric Jazz" movement.

In 1970, Zawinul founded the band Weather Report and produced a series of albums including "Heavy Weather," "Black Market" and "I Sing the Body Electric." After that band's breakup, he founded the Zawinul Syndicate in 1987."

Title link takes you to the full report via the Associated Press. It's a sad day.

side view

flickr by nakedintruder.

click here for the full size shot. One more here.

the harvestman Malgorithm
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