MATRIXSYNTH


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Novation Bass Station 2 Demo @ Musikmesse 2013

New video added to the main BassStation 2 post here. Scroll down to the red update. You'll find the complete lists of synths presented at this year's Musikmesse here.

h e r m e t i c


Published on Apr 16, 2013 Phisynth·63 videos

"A small teaser for my new freely downloadable release on the wonderful Game Of Life label
http://gameoflife.bandcamp.com/album/...
http://gameoflife.bandcamp.com/
Thanks to Paskal. for making this possible !"

Serge & Bugbrand modulars.

OMFG its a BUCHLA

Published on Apr 16, 2013

"the upcoming OMFG drummachine by skinnerbox + a misuse of a monstrous buchla system (original 259´s!!) at EMS stockholm"

Stereo 9U Ambient Modular noises - Into Eventide Space

Published on Apr 16, 2013 Introvertmusic·29 videos

"Stereo 9U Ambient Modular noises - Into Eventide Space
Audio was run directly into my Zoom Q3HD

Just another round of mellow eurorack noises"

Space on eBay

Marc-Henri Performing in a Cathedral Video


The video of Marc-Henri's performance at the Saint Bonaventure cathedral in Lyon has been added to this post. Scroll down to the update when you get there.

Creating Motorcycle Sound Effects For Footage using KORG iMS-20

Published on Apr 15, 2013 Mee Zanook·31 videos

"Watch the magic of Sound & Visual come to life..
Step by Step Mee Zanook works the iMS-20 into Motorcycle Effects and then combines the established sounds with racing footage,he works the oscillators live while different types of footage comes in and out..

Footage: Bottledvideo.com(free footage for the masses)"

iTunes:
KORG iMS-20 - KORG INC.
iOS Devices on eBay - Daily Tech Deals

Monday, April 15, 2013

New Serge 70s panels by COA-Modular



via http://www.coa-modular.com

"Here she is the first in a series of factory produced MetalPhoto quality aluminum anodized, satin finished panels !  Only $75 ! To go with your Legit CGS/ SERGE PCBs of course !
contact dankedout415 at gmail dot com"

KORG POLYSIX

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

If you ever pick up a Polysix, be sure to check on the battery fix.

Rheyne - Live Jam #76


Published on Apr 15, 2013

"Live looping with analog keyboards, USB controllers, iOS devices, and Ableton Live. Nothing was pre-recorded.

Download or stream the audio at SoundCloud: http://snd.sc/ZmI5Uo

Equipment:
DJ TechTools MID Fighter 3D
iPad running Lemur, wirelessly controlling Ableton Live
iPad running Sunrizer
Oxygen25 controlling NI's Kontakt for piano
Oxygen25 controlling Sunrizer via an iConnectMIDI
KMI QuNeo controlling NI's Kontakt for drums
DSI MoPho Keyboard
Akai APC20
Novation Launchpad
Moog Prodigy
Fender Rhodes with an MXR Wylde Overdrive
PreSonus 1818VSL connected to a MacBook Pro running Ableton Live

Pictured, but not used in this jam:
iPad running Animoog

Lighting:
5x Chauvet Slim Par 56 LED
2x American DJ Mega 50 RGB
American DJ H2O LED"

Mystery Synth - Korg 700s/770 Prototype?


Published on Apr 15, 2013

"I found this "mystery synth" at a garage sale this weekend. It appears very similar to a Korg 700s, but upon closer examination there are clear differences. The second oscillator has it's own waveform and pitch selector, for example. And the style of sliders and controls are certainly different than those found on a 700s.

If you know anything about this instrument, please let me know!

At any rate it's a great sounding synth!"

This one in via via Dan Goldstein who found the synth. Talk about an amazing find.
Click here for a pic of the inside of a Mini-KORG 700.  Update: also click here for one more.  Note two of the boards appear to match but this mystery synth has one more. I couldn't find any of the inside of a 770 to compare.  If you search for KORG 770 or KORG 700s you will see the controls are similar but different.  With that we are left with two possibilities, this is either a very nicely done DIY synth composed of vintage KORG parts or a KORG prototype that fell somewhere within the 700 series.



And details also posted on gearslutz: "Here's everything I know about it:

I found this instrument on CraigsList, posted at a garage sale here in Las Vegas. The seller said that he'd purchased it on eBay not knowing what it was, and that he believed it was "built by a guy that worked at Ibanez." That was all the provenance that he was able to provide. The instrument was clearly so bizarre that I had to take it home and find out more about it. It does work, mostly, and it certainly has a unique sound despite it's incredibly strange architecture, which I'll describe below.

I opened it up, eagerly hoping for clues about its origins, but what I found deepened the mystery further. As you can see in the photos below, the circuity of this synthesizer is totally discreet. There are some metal can-style Op Amps, namely 741HC and MN131A, which would seem to date this in the early 70s. There are no markings of any sort on the circuit boards, just hand-labeled numbers by the patch points on the circuit boards. I can't find any sort of name anywhere, though the words "Made In Japan" are on the 1/4" output panel.

The architecture of this instrument is incredibly bizarre. It features two standard oscillators. Oscillator one has triangle, square, and sawtooth waveforms, plus a "Chorus 1" and "Chorus 2" setting that seem to be chorused sawtooth waves. Oscillator two features triangle, square, sawtooth, a thinner square wave, and reverse sawtooth. Then there's a third sort of oscillator, which is switchable between noise and what I think is some sort of ring-modulator that operates on Oscillator One. There's a global tuning knob but no fine-tune knobs for the oscillators.

Things get weird after that. There's an attack-release envelope for the VCA, and that's the only envelope you get. There's a resonant low-pass filter and a resonant high-pass filter, but no resonance knob, so you're stuck with a single cutoff control for each filter. The low and high cutoff filters are sort of "ganged" together so that you can't move the Lowpass cutoff above the Highpass cutoff - they move together once they meet, if that makes sense. There's an LFO that seems to be fixed at a triangle wave, and it can be routed to frequency or filter or both, and there's some sort of vibrato delay switch that doesn't seem to do anything. There's also a Repeat switch and speed control that will cause the envelope to retrigger, which is pretty cool. There are some other bizarre controls too, including a "Bright" switch that makes the sound brighter, an "Expand" switch that doesn't really do much of anything, and a "Bender" switch that causes notes to quickly bend up to the pressed key (I remember a similar feature on the Roland VP330, for example).

There's a 3-position sustain switch that goes from "Short" to "Long" and determines if the envelope continues after you've released a key. It works fine, but as soon as you release a key the frequency of the note played drops to some lower, random value. Perhaps the sample-and-hold is not working right.

The cabinet and design is clearly Minimoog inspired, but it's not a Minimoog case. My first thought was that this was a home-made synth of some kind but I'm very doubtful after spending time with it. The silkscreening is very professionally done, the cabinet is all custom-made with interesting angles. There's even a sort of thumb screw on the bottom that lets you lock down the folding-up synth portion of the instrument for transport. Everything about the instrument seems to suggest it was professionally made. The only outputs are a Low and High audio output. There are no inputs at all, no bend wheel or mod wheel, though there's clearly space for such a thing. The lack of basic features (i.e. sustain & release envelope stages, fine tune, resonance amount, etc.) and the addition of unusual features (repeat, bender, etc.) make for one odd combination. And the fact that I can't find any label anywhere makes this a serious synthesizer mystery.

I've owned an awful lot of analog synthesizers and have read decades worth of magazines and web sites, and I've never seen anything like this. Does anyone here have any insight at all into what this might be? Perhaps it's a kit synth from the 70s, like a PAIA design of some kind? Perhaps this was a prototype for a product that never got built? The components date it to the early 70s, so perhaps some company was attempting to challenge the Minimoog and decided against it? If anyone has any information at all on what this could be, I'd sure appreciate it! I'm happy to answer any questions about this synth."


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