MATRIXSYNTH


Sunday, August 02, 2009

pulsemonger bass guitar demo


YouTube via synthmonger. guitar synth

Tokyo Lick


YouTube via jeffreystolet. via Devient Synth.
"music composed and performed by Jeffrey Stolet using custom software and infrared sensors"

"New Electro-Acoustic Technologies and Changing Human/ Music Interfaces
With Jeffrey Stolet
Philip H. Knight Professor of Music
Director of Intermedia Music Technology
University of Oregon School of Music
Simple Input, Complex Output: Performance and Data mapping in Tokyo Lick.
Challenges regarding the conceptual design and implementation of human / music
instrument interfaces have a rich and nuanced history. Generally, if a musical instrument
has thrived it has been due to the fact that the particular instrument could provide the
desired musical outcome. Traditional instruments typically display a simple one-to-one
relationship in terms of input and output (e.g., one piano key is depressed, one note is
sounded). Current technologies release us from the shackles of such one-to-one input-
output models and permit to the creation of new types of musical generation. At the
University of Oregon we have been involved with projects where musical robots perform
music, where eye movement data control sound and video, and where infrared sensing
devices control sonic and video events.
In his program, Mr. Stolet will focus on the technology and the human-performance
elements in Tokyo Lick, his composition for infrared sensors, custom interactive software,
and MIDI piano. He performs Tokyo Lick by moving his hands through two invisible
infrared spheres and directing the data derived from those motions to algorithms residing in
customized interactive software created in the Max multimedia programming environment.
Tokyo Lick contains no sequences or pre-recorded material. Mr. Stolet will perform every
note in real-time. Using a technology he refers to as “algorithm flipping,” he can rapidly
change the specific algorithm or algorithms governing the response to the incoming MIDI
control data. He actuates the algorithmic changes through pre-composed schedules, musical
contexts, or through explicit intervention. Taken together, these techniques provide a
conceptual framework for practical input/output mapping (action → specified outcome) and
for control and performance flexibility, while offering a truly new paradigm for virtuoso
music performance.
Biography:
Jeffrey Stolet is a Philip H. Knight Professor of Music and Director of Intermedia Music
Technology at the University of Oregon School of Music. Stolet's work has been presented
in America, Europe, Japan and Australia, and is available on the Newport Classic and
Cambria labels. At the University of Oregon, Stolet has also developed the curricula for a
Bachelor of Science in Music Technology degree, a Master of Music in Intermedia Music
Technology, and the curriculum for Intermedia Music Technology as a Secondary Area for
music students pursuing doctoral degrees"

VEX "It Could Be Sunshine" Love and Rockets tribute


VEX "It Could Be Sunshine" Love and Rockets tribute from Hunter Senftner on Vimeo.

Moog Minimoog. Borderline NSFW. via Amateur Chemist "VEX covering Love and Rockets "It Could Be Sunshine", from the tribute album "New Tales to Tell". Featuring Natalia Jovovich, Paul Ill (Courtney Love), and Kellii Scott (Veruca Salt, Failure). Shot at Linda Perry's legendary Kung Fu Gardens recording studio. Directed by Hunter Senftner of Primitive Groove productions."

VINTAGE SONUS MIDI SYNTH INTERFACE COMMODORE 64 128


via this auction

MIDI interface cartridge for the Commodore 64 and 128.

hex oscillator in a sunbeam


YouTube via danielfiction
"this video shows some of the longer evolving drones the hex oscillator shine thing can make. in a patch of sunlight, this instrument makes thick textures which slowly mutate as the light of day passes."

Joy Division Pulsar cp1919 in Alchemy

You might remember this post on Joy Division's Unknown Pleasures album cover. Gsynth was curious what it might sound like as a wavetable you could import and scan through on the Waldorf Blofeld. Well, noiseconformist decided to see what it would sound like imported into Camel Audio's Alchemy. It's actually pretty interesting and does sound like a wavetable. You can hear and read about it here. Comments disabled here to keep them there.


Everything You Always Wanted to Hear on the Moog

via Tom

click on the images for the full size shots. Note the reference to Moog rhyming with Rogue in the last paragraph on the left column in the bottom shot.

BTW, check out Tom's website for some amazing (non synth) photography.

Update: in case you tried to contact Tom at his website, he realized his contact form wasn't working. You can reach him directly at tomast3 at me.com instead.


Yellow OMEGA 8 Demo



"Analog, Synth, Studio Electronics

http://cl516.blogspot.com. CL516 Edition - Yellow on yellow Studio Electronics Omega 8.

Release date: Aug 3, 2009"
Update: cl516 post here

MATRIXSYNTH-C

This is just a reminder to check out MATRIXSYNTH-C. There are some good posts going up.

Yamaha CS80

via Scott
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