MATRIXSYNTH


Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Workspace and Environment: Zach Goheen

click here for the full post on trash_audio.

"Wurlitzer "super-sprite" funmaker. It's a 70s console organ with built in drum machine and speakers. It has buttons labeled with things like "magic chords" and "latin". Of all the keyboards in the studio, thats the first one to get played when someone new comes over. It;s a one man fun band - especially when the Echoplex has its way with it."

Devi Ever : Effector 13 - Spectacular Aenima - white noise


YouTube via wwwEFFECTOR13com.
"This is what the SP AE does if you have nothing plugged in and tweak it just right. Go a little too far one way or the other though and you get crazy oscillation (sometimes sounds like radio interference though!) Check out the end with a little sub oscillation trying to break in, sounds like heavy winds over loading a microphone."

Digital Dub Siren by Oceanus


YouTube via xd515.
"Here is a brand new design.. a Digital Dub Siren, 3 oscillators, arpeggios, noise, sweeps.. watch out for the super long 'Auto Siren' If you want one, the details are at the end of the clip :-)"

Cakewalk Founder Greg Hendershott Interview on CDM

"I think when I was there [Oberlin College] we got the first [Yamaha] DX7 [synthesizer]. That came into the lab, and everyone was really excited — and totally baffled about how to program it, because we were used to the Moog modular kind of synths where you literally had the patch cords around your necks and were making patches by [connecting] cords. So, to figure out FM synthesis was a little tricky. Working with a big modular synth was tactile and interactive. And then you had this small screen."

click here for the interview on Create Digital Music.

Roland JD-800

images via this auction

"Roland JD-800 ( JD 800 ) Synth including 5 Sound Libraries (SL-JD 80). This keyboard is 61 keys, Velocity & Channel Aftertouch(working on all 61 keys) w/ 4 velocity curves; 24 voice polyphony; 6 Parts Multitimbral (Multi mode): 5 part multitimbral + drum mode; Sound memory: 64 internal RAM patches storage positions plus 64 Rom-card patches; Tone generation: S+S (Sampling and Synthesis) with resonant filters; 6 MegaByte ROM with 108 PCM Waves plus 5 Libraries of ROM plug in cards(one for wave(up to 131 per library) and one for the 64 additional patches per library) Libraries include SL-JD80-02 Drums & Percussion DANCE, SL-JD80-03 Rock Drums, SL-JD80-04 Strings Ensemble, SL-JD80-05 Brass Section, SL-JD80-08 Accordion."

360 Systems Spectre Guitar Synth


images via this auction

"360 Systems Spectre Guitar Synthesizer circa 1978. Unit in original tolex case, no manual what you see is what you get. Unit was modified to respond to CV/Gate inputs. I did not preform this mod so I cannot answer any questions other than it does respond to standard 1 V per octave CV and gate from an Arp Sequencer. This is essentailly an Oberheim SEM in a portable tolex case minus one envelope gen, you might be able to mod it and add the second envelope as the boards are original Oberheim SEM 'A'." Also see this post.

KORG Polysix

images viathis auction

MOOG Polymoog Service Manual

images via this auction. You can see what a previous one went for in this post.

"Moog Polymoog Synthesizer?Keyboard/Polypedal Service Manuals Volumes I & II."

Roland M-16C

via this auction

"Roland 16-C Memory cartridge... The Roland M-64C memory cartridge fits most Roland synthesizers, drum machines, and sequencers from the mid-80s.

M-64C works with the MKS-10, MKS-20, MKS-70, JX-8P, JX-10, TR-909, TR-707, GR-700, as well as others."

Magic Music From The Telharmonium Documentary


YouTube via audiolemon. via Nusonica.


"It was 1906. "Get Music on Tap Like Gas or Water" promised the headlines, and soon the public was enchanted with inventor Thaddeus Cahill's (1867-1934) electrical music by wire.

The Telharmonium was a 200-ton behemoth that created numerous musical timbres and could flood many rooms with sound.

Beginning with the first instrument, constructed in the 1890's, and continuing with the installation of the second instrument at Telharmonic Hall in New York, the rise and fall of commercial service, the attempted comeback of the third Telharmonium, and ending with efforts to find a home for the only surviving instrument in 1951, this documentary provides a definitive account of the first comprehensive music synthesizer.

You can get a full DVD of this documentary: [link to DVD on Amazon]

This clip was reposted from [link] with the permission of Reynold Weidenaar."
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