MATRIXSYNTH


Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Vintage Emu Modular Parts & Modules

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

via this auction - Dual Preamp, Ring Modulator, Dual Reverb, Keyboard Outputs, & Sample & Hold.

Nigeria's First Moog Dealer & Electronic Musician William Onyeabor


via Moogmusic

"William Onyeabor is one of the most mysterious, fascinating, and brilliant electronic musicians you’ve never heard of. Born in a small, rural town in Eastern Nigeria, he left to study cinematography in the Soviet Union, returning to Nigeria in the mid-70s to become the country's first Moog dealer while starting his own film company and record label."


"Between 1978-1985, he self-released eight remarkable records, on which he wrote, produced, and played every instrument alone. He developed a signature style of African electronic funk in the late 70s to early 80s, arriving at a sound that was completely unique for its time. Today, he is slowly being elevated to cult status among a growing list of admirers, and gaining attention from an eclectic range of artists from Damon Albarn and Hot Chip to Carl Craig and Madlib – yet has refused to ever speak about his music again."


"More than 30 years after original release, William Onyeabor’s music will be given new life by Luaka Bop on October 29th, 2013, with the release of "Who is William Onyeabor?". To celebrate the release, Moog and Luaka Bop are thrilled to present the William Onyeabor remix series featuring covers and remixes by artists such as Dam-Funk, John Talabot, and Peaking Lights, to name a few, who’ve reworked Onyeabor’s original music using custom Moog synthesizers and their own signature styles."


"Stay tuned to moogmusic.com as the project unfolds this fall and don’t miss the week of William Onyeabor parties happening around the world, starting October 24th. Visit williamonyeabor.com for full line-up and to rsvp for each party. Pre-order "Who is William Onyeabor?" now, and download the song Atomic Bomb instantly."

Take Me To Your Modular: Exhibit at Mountain Oasis Festival This Weekend


via The Bob Moog Foundation on Facebook

"Take Me To Your Modular: Exhibit and Samoogarai design at #MtnOasis festival this weekend! Check out the details here: http://bit.ly/17Iujwt"

"The Bob Moog Foundation is proud to present Take Me to Your Modular, an intimate exhibit of three vintage modular synthesizers from the early days of contemporary synthesis. Take Me to Your Modular will be presented for the very first time at the 2013 Mountain Oasis Electronic Music Summit from October 25th-27th in the Diana Wortham Theater lobby, where the Foundation will also house Dr. Bob’s Interactive Sonic Experience, a setup of theremins and synthesizers for public exploration.

Highlighted in the exhibit will be a custom built Moog modular, featuring many modules from the early 1967 R.A. Moog company, an Aries 300, and an ARP 2600. The instruments are part of a new loan from UNC-Greensboro to the Bob Moog Foundation. With each system comes a fascinating story not only about the technology, but also about the technicians and end users. The exhibit was created to inform and inspire people about some the early iterations of modular synthesis, a technology upon which much of the music at the festival is rooted.


In conjunction with the exhibit, the Foundation is offering custom t-shirt featuring an image affectionately dubbed by the artist as the Samoogarai, a samurai robot figure made completely of synthesizer elements including modules, keys, knobs, and cables. The image was originally designed by Brooklyn based John Solomine of Spike Press and was a star at the SYNTH Art Show at Moogfest 2012.

Come visit the Take Me To Your Modular exhibit from 12-6pm at the Diana Wortham Theater lobby through the Mountain Oasis weekend. After the festival, we will be posting more information about each modular synthesizer. Please check the website for updates."

If you are heading to the Mountain Oasis Festival, don't miss TRASH_AUDIO's event there as well.

Elastik - LIVE


Published on Oct 23, 2013 Alba Ecstasy·79 videos

"A LIVE jam session with Novation Bass Station II, Virus Ti2, Korg Radias, Korg microX, Nord Lead 3, MoPho. No audio mastering. http://www.albaecstasy.ro/"

Wejaam Dubstep

Published on Oct 23, 2013 Zikkos909·52 videos

iTunes: WEJAAM - Dan Armandy

Shuffling Chaos Multiplier

Published on Oct 23, 2013 Modular Cult·13 videos

"An experiment in chaos. The 4ms Shuffling Clock Multiplier is clocked by a Yusynth LFO, which is in turn modulated by the stepped random output of my Enigma module (a Fibonacci LFSR). Please listen with headphones to make the most of the chaotic panning.

Thanks for watching!"

Jam Session with Volca Keys, Bass, Beats and Boss DR-660

Published on Oct 23, 2013 mawwrecords·15 videos

"Gear:

Korg Volca Keys
Korg Volca Beats
Korg Volca Bass
Boss DR-660 with Line 6 M13 multi effects

A little piece of a new track jam session! Hope you like it!

Pedro Zopelar."

KORG Volcas on eBay

Oberheim SEM -- the original


Published on Oct 23, 2013 LESINDES·111 videos

SNAZZY FX: ARDCORE EXPANDER

Published on Oct 23, 2013 snazelle·105 videos

SNAZZY FX on eBay

Koma Elektronik FT201 Analog Filter Step Sequencer, BD101 Analog Gate Delay, RH301 Rhythm Workstation Demo Videos

Koma Elektronik FT201 Analog Filter Step Sequencer | Sound | Demo | Test

Published on Oct 23, 2013 MusicStoreTV·2,125 videos

http://www.musicstore.de

KOMA Elektronik on eBay

"A demo of the Koma Elektronik FT201 Analog Filter Step Sequencer.

Features:
Three filter outputs; Bandpass, Low pass and High pass, which all work simultaneously
Slide controls for Input Gain and Resonance for more control while playing
On board infrared expression controller, can be used as a standalone CV feature
CV control for Resonance, Sequencer Reset, Cutoff
CV input for External Clock signals and synchronization with other KOMA Elektronik pedals
CV attenuators on the back of the pedal to fine-tune the CV inputs"

Koma Elektronik BD101 Analog Gate Delay | Sound | Demo | Test

"A demo of the Koma Elektronik BD101 Analog Gate Delay.

Features:
Slide controls for Input Gain and Delay Blend for more control while playing
Onboard infrared expression controller, can be used as a standalone CV feature
CV control for Gate Speed, Gate Amount, Delay Time and Delay Feedback
CV input for External Clock signals and synchronization with other KOMA Elektronik pedals
CV attenuators on the back of the pedal to fine-tune the CV inputs
Send/Return Insert for external processing of BBD Feedback signals
A wide frequency range Gate / Amplitude Modulation; choose between High, Mid and Low
Multiple Gate shapes; Ramp, Pulse and Sawtooth"

Koma Elektronik RH301 Rhythm Workstation | Test with Tempest, Nanozwerg and Dark Energy

"We tested the new Koma Elektronik RH301 Rhythm Workstation with DSI Tempest, Doepfer Dark Energy, MFB Nanozwerg and the Koma Elektronik Pedals BD101 and FT201.

This cool tool doesn't only sync everything to everything - it's a creative way to produce crazy electronic beats!"
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