MATRIXSYNTH


Wednesday, August 20, 2014

The Thingamagoop 2x - Final Run - Last Chance To Get a Thingamagoop 2!


Published on Aug 20, 2014 Bleep Labs

"The 2x is the final version of the Thingamagoop 2. It will be available to order August 21st to September 22nd. After that no more Thingamagoop 2s will be built.

More info on the 2x here. http://bleeplabs.com/store/thingamago...
Check out this video for more on the Thingamagoop . https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_QFH..."

Note the 3 new colors, black powdercoated enclosure, and various bugfixes in the code.

It will be available to order until September 22nd. After that no more Thingamagoop 2s will be available.


Down, Down, Down, Marvelous


Published on Aug 20, 2014 John L Rice

"I was messing around with running the great organ sound from a Yamaha TX81Z through a Strymon Mobius to make it sound twice as great and I ended up adding a modular sequence bass line, recording a bit of it and then throwing some Cory Friesenhan vocal loops on it."

Modded PPG WAVE 2.2 SYNTHESIZER

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

via this auction

There appears to be eight switches followed by four on the upper right of the front panel (see the second pic). Anyone have any idea what the mods might be for?  The PPG Wave 2.2 was eight voice polyphonic.  The Wave 2.3 added multitimbral capability. The screen reads "PPG-WAVE 2.2 V4". According to the listing this was owned by a legendary Motown producer. There is currently no mention on who that might be or what the mods are.

Check out this post for some PPG Wave differences, and of course the excellent PPG Webpages.

See the PPG channel label here on MATRIXSYNTH for "Everything PPG" including videos, audio demos, previous PPGs for sale and of course, plenty of pics.

Noystoise NTO2 Mini Joystick Synths


Published on Aug 20, 2014


I have to say these are pretty stinking cute and do sound great. Via Noystoise:

"This is the latest set of NT(noystoise) series novelty synthesizers. following the overwhelming reception of the original NT01 series, it was pretty clear that if i build them, they will sell. the NT02 is simpler in many ways than the original NT01, but the sound and character are a bit more sophisticated than that of the NT01. the NT02 consists of a square wave VCO with chorus/delay, a white noise generator, a ramp LFO, and individual 12db resonant lowpass filters for the VCO and white noise generator. the pitch of the VCO is controlled by one axis of the VCO joystick, while the other axis controls the delay time of the chorus. the chorus circuit is basically just your typical PT2399 delay chip setup, except there is no feedback loop. the VCO is fed to the delay chip, and the delayed signal is recombined with the initial signal before the filter stage. the effect makes the VCO sound much bigger and warmer with the chorusing effect. almost like an old analog poly-synth with detuned VCOs. the white noise generator is your basic two transistor type found in many old synth designs. a common issue with the two transistor noise generators is that they require at least 9 to 10 volts to operate. that's just fine if you are using a plug in power supply, but when using a 9 volt battery, the noise generator usually wont work. in my case, the noise generator wouldn't sound with any less than 10 volts. however, the noise generator doesn't draw all that much current, so i simply used a 555 charge pump voltage multiplier to get the circuit where it needed to be. the problem i ran in to on the breadboard though, was there was some cross-talk from the 555 charge pump oscillator to the VCO, so i only used the 555 charge pump method for the first NT02(revA). for the others i simply buffered the VCO, and made a charge pump out of that. this way, if there was any cross-talk, it would be harmonized and unnoticeable. however, once the NT02 revA was built and working, the cross-talk was gone, so i guess it wasn't necessary. both the VCO and the white noise generator have their own respective filter with resonance control. the cutoff frequency of both filters are controlled by their respective axis on the VCF joystick. the center switch on the joystick toggles either the VCO or noise voice on or off depending on which joystick switch you press. each voice will remain on or off until the switch is pressed again. this feature was not included in the revA NT02. its voices are permanently on. the NT02's LFO is ramp shaped and can be set to modulate one of four parameters, or turned off. the LFO can modulate either the chorus delay time, VCO pitch, VCO filter cutoff, or the noise filter cutoff. on the revA NT02, the VCO pitch setting controls the maximum threshold of the pitch joystick, whereas the revB VCO pitch setting is independent of the pitch joystick. the LFO rate is controlled by the knob above the VCF joystick. the NT02 also has a volume knob, a 1/4 inch switching line out jack that bypasses the built in speaker when plugged in, and a center positive polarity protected DC jack that bypasses the internal battery when plugged in. the internal power supply is regulated, so any DC adapter between 9 and 18 volts will work just fine. unfortunately, unlike the NT01, the NT02 does not have CV inputs or outputs. the NT02 revA(black one) does have two 0-5 volt CV inputs for the VCO and LFO, but the revB models do not because their circuits' operating voltage is 8vdc instead of 5, which is kind of an unusual number... i would have liked to have scaled CV inputs that could turn 0-5 volt CV input to the necessary 1-8 volt CV input that the VCFs, VCO, and LFO require, but space was too limited. the inputs are in there though. i still kind of regret not including the ability to connect CV inputs to the NT02, but it is just safer this way. these were not intended as modular synths. they can be easily modified though, for any advanced users out there. hopefully these little synths do as well as the NT01 did so i can start on an NT03... the NT02s will be available at my for sale page until they are all gone. have a look, tell your friends about this BLOG!!!
Thanks for reading,
Tanner"

Lithodora//Wisdom Wig Live Jam


Published on May 24, 2014

Moog Slim Phatty, DSI Tempest & Elektron Octatrack

"Practicing up for my live set! If you like what you hear, both songs, and many more, are available for download at my SoundCloud page here: https://soundcloud.com/drrnpllck

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drrnpllckmusic"

The Further (Live Synthesizer Jam)

Moog Modular Synthesizer 962 Sequential Switch Module Panel

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

via this auction

"This is an original 962 panel from a 60s Moog modular synthesizer. It is used and in decent shape, some scratches, sold as-is. Maybe good if you have one with more damage or wear. I have more vintage synthesizer stuff going up on auction, so check out my other listings, including more Moog panels. Thanks!"

Vintage Moog Modular Synthesizer CP1 Module Panel

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

via this auction

"This is an original CP1 panel from a 60s or 70s Moog modular synthesizer. It is used and in decent shape, sold as-is. These CP panels are among the most difficult to find. I have more vintage synthesizer stuff going up on auction, so check out my other listings, including more Moog panels. Thanks!"

Vintage Moog Modular Synthesizer CP5 Module Panel

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

via this auction

"This is an original CP5 panel from a 60s or 70s Moog modular synthesizer. It is used and in decent shape, sold as-is. These CP panels are among the most difficult to find. I have more vintage synthesizer stuff going up on auction, so check out my other listings, including more Moog panels. Thanks!"

Vintage R A Moog modular synthesizer instructions book manual

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

via this auction

"This is an original Owners Manual from a 60s or early 1970s Moog modular synthesizer. "Setting Up Your Moog Synthesizer". It is about 15 pages and in good, but not perfect shape. I have more vintage synthesizer stuff going up on auction, so check out my other listings, including more Moog panels. Thanks!"

Vintage STRIDER Vintage digital synthesizer brochure

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

via this auction

Possibly even more rare the the Con Brio brochure that just went up.

"One of the more rare and interesting synthesizers is the STRIDER DCS-1. It was from Norman Oklahoma, and attempted to steal some of the market from Synclavier, Fairlight and Con Brio. This in in great shape. I have more vintage synthesizer stuff going up on auction, so check out my other listings, including more Moog panels. Thanks!"

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