MATRIXSYNTH


Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Roland SH-32 Desktop VA Synthesizer

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

via this auction

"The Roland SH-32 is 4-part multitimbral synthesizer that packed a huge array of digital functions in a small and easy to use desktop model. Aimed at being similar to the legendary Roland SH series of the 1970's/1980's but with the engines of the modern (at the time) JP-8000, the SH32 combines the age of analog modeling and playability of the former analog machines. Additionally, the Sh32 has fantastic sounding digital effects, 64 arpeggiator types, and 67 individual wave-forms playable over 32 voices making this compact synthesizer / groove box an affordable and excellent machine."

1984 Yamaha TX816 (basically 8 x DX7 racked)

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

via this auction

"Super clean Yamaha TX816 rack. Full load of 8x TX1 modules. Each one is a DX7 FM Synth. The unit features independent MIDI connections or a Master connection on the front. Outputs are balanced... Full of the best DX7 sounds ever created at an original cost of $5,500.

Integrates perfectly with the open source DeXed VST plugin in your DAW for programming and patch librarian duties."

The Haken Audio ContinuuMini with the Expressive E Touché


Published on Feb 20, 2019 HakenAudio

"This video goes into depth showing an integration of the Touché with the EaganMatrix, the sound engine inside the Continuum and the ContinuuMini."

Tutorial comes in at :59.

Waldorf Streichfett - Benjamin LAZZARUS


Published on Feb 20, 2019 Benjamin LAZZARUS

"This track is only made with sounds coming from the Waldorf Streichfett (String Synthesizer)
Video: "The Tree of life" Terrence Malick"

MAKEN0ISE: Complex Sequencing from Simple Patching


Published on Feb 20, 2019 MAKEN0ISE

"It’s typical for synthesizer architecture to be described in terms of so-called “voices” and “polyphony”… you have the monophonic synthesizer with one voice, like the Minimoog… or the polyphonic synthesizer with multiple voices, like the Roland Jupiter series. Any break from this architecture gets argued over seemingly endlessly. Take a look at the so-called “paraphonic” synth, like the Korg Poly-800, where there are multiple oscillators but they all a share a gate structure. Or the modular synth, which is typically polyphonic, but in a polytimbral fashion rather than the monotrimbral chords you hear from a keyboard polysynth. If you need a boost to your melatonin levels you can go to a synthesizer convention and listen to somebody give an hours-long presentation on how to define these various terms, and just what does and does not count as “polyphony.”

The dogma of the voice structure is encoded right into the MIDI standard, still the most recognized way to control synthesizers and other electronic instruments. A MIDI Note ALWAYS has a start point and end point that are tied to a particular pitch value or note number. You never have one without the other. To be sure, this is roughly the way it works in the so-called real world on acoustic keyboard instruments. When you press a key on a piano, you are starting that particular note, and when you release it, you are ending that particular note.

But synthesizers are not acoustic instruments. The gate structure that tells when a note starts and ends does not have any intrinsic relationship to that note’s pitch… yet if anyone ever showed you how to use a modular synth they probably started by showing you how to patch a monosynth. The VCO goes to the VCA, which is opened by a gate that comes at the same time as new note values. MIDI messages are so rigid in their form that for decades people have been using programs like Max and Pure Data to break them into component parts and put them back together in more interesting ways, because it can almost never be done using a MIDI controller and a synth alone. But a modular synthesizer has no such limitation. CV and Gate signals are independent by nature and design.

In this video we'll take a couple simple sequences from René and vastly increase their complexity by just swapping the destinations of their gate outputs."

ETHER by SOMA laboratory


Published on Feb 20, 2019 Vlad Kreimer

"ETHER is a wide-band pocket receiver that turns the electromagnetic landscape around you into a live soundscape that you control and manipulate by walking around and moving ETHER with your hand."


via SOMA laboratory

The net price of ETHER is 120 euros. The total price including shipping to most countries, PayPal transfer fees and VAT will be around 150 euros. We will specify the exact price when we receive your shipping address.


"ETHER is a kind of anti-radio. Instead of being tuned to a specific radio station, it receives all the interference and radiation that a traditional radio tries to eliminate in order to create a clean signal. It captures the radio waves “as is” from hertz to gigahertz, because it doesn’t contain the tuned input circuit that filters out all frequencies except the narrow band of a specific station. This allows ETHER to perceive the invisible electromagnetic landscape that humans created unintentionally, making possible live electromagnetic field listening and recording.
As the inspiration for this project, I took the design of the very first radios (early 1900s) that had no tuning wheel. At this time there weren’t many radio stations, and all of them used Morse code. It was possible to distinguish each transmitter by ear, as each one had its own specific timbre or “voice”.

ETHER is pocket-sized (105x65x20mm) and light-weight (93g). It consumes very little power and runs on two AAA batteries. How long it can run on two batteries is unclear, because I still use the very same set of alkaline batteries I put into the first ETHER prototype 6 years ago! (yes the project has taken 6 years). All I can definitely say is that battery life is more than 300 hours if you using alkaline or lithium batteries.

Vinicius Electrik Lizard System: Lizard + MultiWaves (by Fabio Fonseca for Key Magic Inc)


Published on Feb 20, 2019 Key Magic Inc

"WE ARE LIVE! Get your hands on the Lizard System by Vinicius Electrik on their online store :D
at : www.viniciuselectrik.com"

Flame MÄANDER Synthesizer simple arpeggio like p.floyds"on the run" (beta test)


Published on Feb 20, 2019

-simple monofon squarewave (without wave modulation)
-16th noise track
-test run of OSC filtermodulations
- mix between filter sequence and arpeggio filtering

Flame MÄANDER Synthesizer dark slow arpeggio with white noise (beta test)

Published on Feb 20, 2019

-simple note arpeggio with wavetable modulations
-mix between filter sequence and arpeggio filtering
-white noise sequence with envelope control

Previews of the upcoming Synthesizer MÄANDER from Flame
4-voice Wavetable Synth including 12 channel analog filter bank

teenage engineering x loney dear live at Harpa Concert Hall


Published on Feb 20, 2019 teenageengineering

"teenage engineering x loney dear live performing and controlling the visuals with the OP-Z at Harpa Concert Hall Reykjavík January 2019. Special thanks to Tiny/Massive!"

minilogue xd: First look with Kabuki (part 3)


Published on Feb 19, 2019 Korg

"D&B producer / DJ / Lecturer in sound synthesis at the Abbey Road Institute, Jan Hennig (aka. Kabuki) explores the new minilogue xd!"

minilogue xd: First look with Kabuki videos
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