MATRIXSYNTH


Friday, November 18, 2005

Prophet 5 Shots

Some absolutely fantastic shots of the Sequential Circuits Prophet 5 via Paul Wagorn on AH. Title link takes you to more. BTW, this is for sale. Info below.



> Prophet 5 rev 2 with midi installed. Wood is beautiful, some of the
> lettering is a bit worn.
> Pics: www.orange-records.com/prophet
>
> $1750 if I don't have to calibrate/tune it (it needs it) plus shipping
> includes road case
>
> Peterson VS-2 Virtual strobe tuner. Essentially new. So many uses.
> $179+shuipping
>
> Paul pwagorn [@] pinc.com

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Yamaha CS5 Shots

Nice shot of a Yamaha CS5 and Moog Opus 3. Title link takes you to some more, most of which unfortunately are a bit blurry. But... They are there. This is via Bob on AH.

Sony Block Jam

Update via Paul Maddox on AH:

Flash version you can try out: http://www.sony.net/Fun/SonyDesign/2003/BlockJam/future.html

More info: http://www.csl.sony.co.jp/IL/projects/blockjam/

Don't get too excited. I beleive this is still only a prototype. I remember seeing this a while back on Gizmodo and Engadget. Title link takes you to a bit on it on Sonic State. I just rediscovered it via this VSE post. The following is a link to a video of it. Pretty cool. http://www.csl.sony.co.jp/IL/projects/blockjam/downloads/BlockJam_0.mov.



Via Sonic State:
"Block Jam is a musical interface controlled by the arrangement of 25 tangible blocks. By arranging the blocks musical phrases and sequences are created, allowing multiple users to play and collaborate. The system takes advantage of both graphical and tangible user interfaces. Each block has a visual display and a combination of a gestural input and a click-able input. Each Block metaphorically contains a sound group that can be chosen via the gestural input, the click-able input changes a block functionally. Thus, musically complex and engaging configurations can be rapidly assembled. The tangible nature of the blocks and the intuitive interface promotes face-to-face collaboration, and the presence of the GUI allows for remote collaboration across a network.

By creating both a tangible and a visual language, we are able to create endless meaningful musical structures in a novel and intuitive way that predisposes itself to collaboration and exploration, face to face or via a network, pushing interactive music towards the casual user."

SidStation - New Flickr Shot

Nice close-up of the Elektron SidStation data pad.

Oberhiem Xpander Shots

Oberheim Xpander up on the *bay. Title link takes you to shots saved for posterity.

Terratec Komplexer = Waldorf Micro Q?

Interesting. Komplexer loads Waldorf Micro Q patches. Terratec and Waldorf partnered before Waldorf went out of business, so this makes sense. Via Moogulator (sequencer.de) on this post of Sonic State's the-gas-station. Title link takes you details on KVR.



"Komplexer has eight macro controllers onboard and features three oscillators, two multi-mode filters, four ADSDSR envelopes, three LFOs, and includes the ability to import Waldorf microQ sounds."

Yamaha GX-1 Video Clips

Via AH, Mattias announced some new snippets of video on his Yamaha GX-1 site. Title link takes you there. Enjoy.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

If only...

No, it's not. : ( Every now and then I see something I feel compelled to post, even if it isn't a synth, just because it would make for an amazing synth/interface. Well, this thing just popped up on Boing Boing. Man that would be fun. If only it produced some earth rattling bass, LFO filter sweeps, ripping FM... OMG... I think I actaully am a geek. My wife called me one when I asked her to add the Different Skies DVD to my xmas list. She just doesn't understand... : ) Look at that thing!!!

Terretron\\ 505

Via GetLoFi. Circuit bent Roland TR-505. Apologies to those that consider circuit bending on anything but toys blasphemy. The case and aluminum do look impressive. I must say that. Looks like samples are yet to come. Title link takes you to more detail.



Master Hammond B3

This has been making the waves, so I figure I'd put it up as well, just in case you haven't seen it. It's an update the Syntheway's Master Hammond B3 VST. Via Synthtopia; title link takes you there.

Silver Keys

Don't know why I'm posting this, but... I just like those silver keys! Someone ought to make these for a real synth. Via Senso on AH.



Info from auction for when the link goes down (m'kay...):
"Up for auction is a Beautiful Vintage Toy Magnus Organ Mo 320 - we think it srom the '50s. Made in Linden NJ. ABSOLUTELY MINT CONDITION in original box. Its been stored in an attic for many years. We plugged it in and it works perfect and sounds great. Measures 19" wide, 10" deep and 8" high. Kids will like this organ because its not Michael Jacksons'....hi ohhhhh!. "

Analogue Workshopt/MESI/Paris

I recently posted about the MESI Modular System Workshop in Paris. Well, Ken Macbeth of Macbeth Studio Systems sent the following to AH. He gave me the ok to put this up (the message - I put the shot up myself). Thanks Ken!



"Hi All!.............for those that may be interested, MESI http:www.mesi.fr are having an analogue workshop from Friday the 18th of November until Saturday 19th of November...
It should be good fun fun a stack of analogue gear and not so analogue gear for those who come along to try out and discuss. There should be some intersting vintage items as well as some of the new modular stuff being produced and there shall be some interesting softsynths to try out too. I'm going to be there along with an M5, and I'll be happy to demonstrate to those who come along and would like to see it in action and play the thing!
Have a look at the MESI site, or even my own, there's a link.

Kind Regards, Ken

http://www.macbethstudiosystems.com
Home of the M3X Analogue synthesizer..."

Jarrelook Lazer Harp - via SYNTHOSIUM

Update: Lame on me. It's Jarrelook's Lazer Harp, not JMJ's. Jarrelook is a JMJ tribute band. Nice lazer harp.

Sent to me by Luca Capozzi of Naples Italy. He just set up his new blog on you guessed it, synths and music. Very, very cool. I also announced the site on SYNTHWIRE. BTW, don't forget to use SYNTHWIRE! It's meant for stuff like this. Posting about your site and your work is exactly what it should be used for. It can be anything you want it to be as long as it's focused on synthesis and music. Use it to promote yourself already! Anywho. I can't wait to see what Luca starts posting. Congrats on the new blog, Luca! Title link takes you there. P.S. Obviously I love your site design. ; )

Number of the Beast TR 666

I posted earlier about Julian producing those modded, knob ladden Roland TR-606s. Well, he just put up an official site on them! Check out the face plate that reads, Number of the Beast TR 666. Nice touch. : ) One thing I really wanted to mention was the reason why Julian decided to do this. He said he thought the modded TR-606s he saw for sale on the *bay and the recent Vemia auction where way overpriced. He wanted to produce these for others who might want them for a much more realistic and reasonable price. I thought that was pretty cool of him to do, as he could just build and pop these on the bay for more. I have a tremendous amount of respect for people that do things like this. Very, very cool in my book. Title link takes you there.

FPGA Synth

Interesting project from Chris Strellis. I asked him what an FPGA was and he said the following:

"Field Programmable Gate Array - programmable logic. You write C like software that when compiled produces a binary file you load into the FPGA. The software describes what you want the output pins to do with given input pin signals. For instance with a clock signal going in - you could make 8 output pins go high in sequence according to your code and these outputs could drive LEDs and you'd have Knight Rider lights! Of course more complex things can me done. It is very different to DSP though. DSP can achieve the same things but it's more of an emulation. Programmable logic is the real deal :)"

Title link takes you to his page on the FPGA which includes more shots and some samples. It has a really nice tone to it. Thanks Chris!

Matrixsynth on Google Base

Looks like Google Base is live. It's a place where you can post services or items for sale. It went live last night. I did a few searches on synth to see what was up so far. I only found a shop that sells the CME. So I figured I'd put this sight up! I did and when to bed. This morning it is up! Go to the title link and search for synth. I put up a bunch of standard words like analog, moog, etc. Some come up some done. BTW, I just did a search for Roland and this MC303 came up for sale. Looks like we have another resource for synths for sale.

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

AH Bay Area 2005

Another Flickr set, Carbon111 pointed out. Thought I had seen this one already, but apparently not. Title link takes you there. I put up the links to the other posts on the gathering below.



AH Bay Area Gathering Shots
More AH Bay Area Gathering Shots
AH Bay Area Synth Gathering - New Flickr Shots

Update: And another set via Doug T in the comments:
http://www.retrosynth.com/slideshow/20051016_baah/

reKon Waldorf Pulse VST Editor

Via punkdISCO on AH. Never saw this before. Really nice interface. Title link takes you there.



Update: Interesting note from PunkdISCO that I didn't really think of at the time I posted this:

"There are dozens of free Pulse editors on pretty much any platform we
care to mention. I only posted this new one as its the first that I know of
that is a VST pluggin giving all the benefits of VSTs (automation, patches
stored with the song, etc) all within your song."

ARP 2600 Bug?

Interesting. David Hillel of the New England Synthesizer Museum (Title Link) just posted a bug with the ARP 2600 on AH. Kind of odd when one crops up after all this time.

From the post:

"I was working on two 2600s with David White when he tried a strange ADSR
setting and
it didn't work. I tried replacing all the transistors, all the diodes, and
the opamp in the ADSR
with no fix. So we tried another 2600, same problem. Tried the 2600 on
display at the
Museum, same problem. They apparently all have it.

How to reproduce it:
Set Attack to maximum, Decay to minimum, Sustain to maximum, and
Release to minimum. If you hit the front panel button, you get a slow
attack, but
if you use a 3604 keyboard, the attack is instantaneous, which is wrong.
Of course,
if the sustain is at maximum you can set the Decay anywhere without
affecting the
result of a properly functioning ADSR, so the workaround is to put the
Decay up
to maximum.

Why it happens:
The trigger pulse from the 3604 is deliberately delayed, which prevents
the decay/sustain
logic from being disabled until a few milliseconds after the gate has
risen. This allows the
sustain setting (in this case, maximum) to back circuit through the Decay
control and
fully charge the capacitor before the slow attack can happen."

Anna Ranger

Interesting synth-pop band. Very Vince Clarke. Reminds me a bit of an Indie Yaz with just a touch of OMD, but it's own sound. Via this post on VSE.

Nice shot with an ARP 2500 and Electrocomp

Fame The Movie

Yes, that Fame. As horrid as the thought might be, I just might need to add it to my movie list. There is an interesting thread on VSE regarding analog synth appearances in film and tv. Fame came up including the following two shots. BTW, anyone know what the synth is in the second shot by the older gentleman? Title link takes you to the thread.



Click for a bigger shot to see the synth (anyone know what it is)?.


BTW, I got you to look at Fame pictures. Bwahahahaha... : )

Plan B and Livewire Modular

Carbon111 sent me a link to this Flickr shot. I did a little digging and I'm not sure, but this looks like an EAR (Electro-Acoustic Research) modular. Title link takes you to the EAR site. Flickr link takes you to a much bigger shot where you can read the panels. Thanks Carbon111!



"EAR features the work of two established modular synth designers, Mike Brown of Livewire and Peter Grenader of Plan B. EAR has also announced that it will be the exclusive manufacturer of Tony Allgood's Oakley Sound Systems designs in MOTM and Deopfer formats."

Various Synths - New Flickr Shots

Title link takes you to some other great shots. Man I want a grey SH-101.

The Singing Plant

Basically a botanical theremin. Nice. Via Gizmodo via a string of other blogs. Title link takes you there.



"A plant wired up to a theremin, through custom software, triggering various samples based on the theremin's pitch. sensor system detecting users approaching the plant and then dimming up a spotlight placed over the plant."

Monday, November 14, 2005

Live - New Flickr Shot

Intersting shot. You can easily make out a Roland JP8000 and I beleive, a Doepfer modular.

PPG Wave Computer 360/360A, Wave 2, Wave 2.2/2.3

The following is from Stephen, aka WaveComputer360 (appropriate alias with all this knowledge)! : ) This is a great piece on the PPG Wave line of synthesizers, from the Wave Computer 360/260A, Wave 2, up to the Wave 2.2/2.3. WaveComputer360 originally sent this to AH. He gave me the ok to put it up here. Thanks Stephen! Title link goes to Stephen's website. Also check out the official [´ramp] website at www.doombient.com. Now for PPG:

Image via http://www.ppg.synth.net/360/


"Basically, the Wave 2 is the first of the PPG Waves that came with a VCF for each voice. Other than the 360/360A which had no filtering at all, the Wave 2 had CEM-based filters. Also, it had a different output stage than the 360 and no longer was as hot (still hot, but not THAT hot). In the 360, the direct output from the DAs to the output stage also resulted in an extremely brittle and sizzling sound with loads of quantization and aliasing artefacts which added greatly to its grit. Also, the resolution of many parameters was greatly improved on the Wave 2, hence scanning wavetables no longer produced glitches from value to value but you could find values in between, too. This (plus the filters) lead to some sounds on the Wave 2 the 360 wasn´t capable of producing, even though it had exactly the same wavetables. On the other hand, using the Wave 2 with filters wide open did not get near the viciousness of the Wave Computer 360/360A.

A classic example of the 360 in use would be Wolfgang Düren´s "Eyeless Dreams" album or the albums by Rolf Trostel. Thomas Dolby also used the 360 in addition to the 340/380 system he got from Edgar Froese. "Windpower" would be a prime example. Edgar Froese produced a nice showcase for early PPGs with "Stuntman".

Like the Wave Computer 360/360A, the Wave 2 had two ranks of wavetable oscillators, each capable of producing eight voices. The most interesting results were only obtainable when you layered two ranks of WTOs, thus reducing the Wave 2 to four-voice polyphony (like the Wave Computer 360, and please believe ME and not the others who want to tell you rubbish about four- and eight-voice 360s and upgrades and stuff.... this is utter bullshit). The Wave 2 also featured an internal eight-track sequencer (eight times the 350, so to speak, or the more manageable version of the 380 Event Generator), hence there was a lot more controls necessary than on the 360. PPG introduced two keypads which allowed more access to various voice allocation and wave assignment modes, for controlling the sequencer and for entering various panel modes; in order to make it easier to survey, they also introduced an LC display with which they replaced the original LED readouts (two on the Wave Computer 360 prototype, five on the Wave Computer 360A "production" model).

The best-known examples of the Wave 2 in use would be ABCs "The Look of Love" where Anne Dudley played those famous funeral bells, and Depeche Mode´s "See You", plus various Tangerine Dream stuff ("Das Mädchen auf der Treppe", the edited single-hit off the "White Eagle" album).

The 2.2 had 16 voices, organized in two ranks of WTOs again; by coupling/layering them you reduced polyphony to eight voices. The output stage was slightly altered as well, hence the 2.2 sounds nowhere near as raunchy as a 360 or a Wave 2; the overall sound tends to be smoother and more polite. It already featured 8bit DAs, like the Wave 2, but it had an even more refined sound. It also featured more comprehensive panel controls for easier parameter access (not quite successfully, but there you go). I´m not sure about the filters used, but I think they redesigned the 2.2 and 2.3 to go with SSM filters rather than CEMs.

The 2.3 was introduced in 1984, featured a 12bit DA, and instead of 32 wavetables per oscillator it just had 30 plus two sampled waveforms (piano and saxophone, I think). The onboard sequencer was equipped with larger memory, and the interfacing options for the PPG System were reworked also, which lead to the inclusion of MIDI alongside the PPG communication buss (although the 2.2 could be upgraded to 2.3 standard).

Palm inofficially labelled all Waves as "360", the original prototype Wave Computer 360 with just two LED readouts being the " ", the sort-of production model of the Wave Computer became the 360"A", the Wave 2 was the "WC360B", the 2.2 the "WC 360C" and so forth. Don´t believe the talk; most people have never ever seen a 360 alive (unless they snapped up the ones for sale in the VEMIA) thanks to the 45 or 50 units ever produced. As a consequence, a lot of bad information has spread and found its way into the minds of synthesizer enthusiasts. The 360/360A and the Wave 2 had eight
voices per WTO rank, by layering you reduced polyphony to four voices. The 2.2 and 2.3 came with 16 voices per WTO, usually you´d layer to WTOs and hence reduce polyphony to eight voices.

To make things even more confusing, PPG produced Wave Computer 360As even after the introduction of the Wave 2. This lead to some 360As (two that I know of, but maybe more than that) in Wave 2 casing, but with white panel graphics with black lettering.

[image added: White PPG 360 via http://www.ppg.synth.net/360/]


These units no longer had the Dr. Böhm keyboard used in the earlier 360As but Pratt and Read keyboards which were used for all later PPGs. This may also
have lead to some models in between where Palm himself wasn´t really sure how to label them. That may have been the reason for some confusion in the past (most early PPGs had hand-written serial numbers, written with a soft-tip feltpen).

Trust me, I owned several of these rare beauties (and beauties they are indeed), and I´m very well-acquainted with 360s and Wave 2s. Never felt too keen on getting a 2.2 or 2.3 as I found them nice but not challenging. Still very, very characterful instruments, though, and maybe attractive to those who don´t need quirky instruments (especially the Wave 2 tends to be prone to failures as many of the bugs in the new software revision had not been ironed out properly yet). Even the Wave Computer 360s featured different OS revisions which makes it very hard to find proper OS replacements and transplant it from one unit to another.

All PPGs are quirky in their own way, especially the introduction of MIDI did their reputation no good; like one guinea pig... erm, musician from Hamburg, who had embarked on PPG products right from the start, once pointed out, MIDI and Wolfgang didn´t go well together. And the abbreviation "PPG" was interpreted by many German musicians as "Palms Panik-Geräte" ("Palm´s Panic Units") or "Popelige Palm-Geräte" ("cheapo Palm units").

Apologies for having wasted bandwidth,

Stephen.

"Ambition makes you look pretty ugly." (Thom Yorke/Radiohead -- "Paranoid
Android")

"Hoellenengel" -- new album by Stephen Parsick, street date October 1, 2005.

For info and audio, please check www.parsick.com

Visit the official [´ramp] website at www.doombient.com

WTB: "England´s Hidden Reverse" by David Keenan (Coil, Current93, Nurse With
Wound, David Tibet).

Update: See the comments for more info.

Roland TB-303 Service Docs

In via Fiercefish. Title link takes you to a folder hosting the individual JPGs and a zip of them. Thanks FF!

The Mushroom

You might of heard of the magic mushrooms printed inside the SCI Pro One. Well here's a shot of it. Pretty cool. Brandon Daniel put up a link to his Flickr set in the comments section of my last post on the Pro One. Thanks Brandon!

New DSI Evolver Videos

Axiom added two more videos to the thread. Title link takes you to my original post. I'm putting up this new post in case you missed it. These are great videos. If you ever wanted to spend a good 30 minutes or so trying out an evolver this is about as close as it gets, without of course, the real deal.

Update: Might as well make it easier... Here are the three links:

Bank 2 Parade. XviD AVI (30.7Mb)
Sequences
Some drones

Note: These are via this thread on electro-music.com.

Sealed's New Prophet VS Page

Sealed's put up a new SCI Prophet VS page with samples, info and links. More content will be coming.

Atari Synthcart

Interesting. Neve saw one of these before. According to AtariAge, "The Synthcart is a rather unique title for the 2600 that allows you to play music using a pair of keyboard controllers. Each keyboard controller controls one of the two oscillators in the Atari 2600." Title link takes you to the results of an AtariAge beat contest held for the Atari Synthcart with samples.

Mattel Optigan Site

Another nice site from Mattias. Interesting piece of gear. I've never seen or heard one before. It has a very distinct, groovy and at times moody character to it, for lack of a better description. More info, shots and video well worth checking out after the hop.



According to the site, the Mattel Optigan was used by:
"Optigannally yours, Blur, Tom Waits, Steve Hackett, Steve Fisk, Freddie Wadling, Celestine, AK-momo, Nanook of the North, Pineforest Crunch, Mitchell Froom, Elvis Costello, Aimee Mann, Rufus Wainright, Neil Finn, Jon Brion, The Clash, Sparklehorse." It has a beautiful sound to it.

Mellotron Site

Nice Mellotron site with images, samples, and video. In via Mattias on AH.

Robert Rich & Modular

Nice shot of modular synth musician Rober Rich, sent to me from Michael Weeks. Title link takes you to a bigger shot. Check out the Metasonix Butt Probe in the shot. Thanks Michael!

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Pro One - New Flickr Shot

Hopefully this is the last shot I feel compelled to grab from the set. Check out the shiny wood ends on this Pro One. Make sure to click through the title link for more synth shots.

Update: That ain't a reflection. That's dust. Man, the horror... Absolute sacrilege.

Red Synton Syrinx - New Flickr Shot

One of my most coveted synths. I once had the opportunity to grab a blue one for $2200 US. Like an idiot I didn't. One of these days...

Access Programmer - New Flickr Shot

Access, makers of the Virus line of synths made knob boxes for the Oberheim Matrix1000 and the Waldorf Wave rackmount. Pictured below is the Access programmer for the Waldorf Wave.

Dubreq PianoMate Analog Devide Down Synth

Note: Auction links are affiliate links for which the site may be compensated. Music Thing has a post up on this interestig piece up for auction. I grabbed the auction shot and the description of the unit for posterity. Title link takes you to the Music Thing post as the auction link will eventually end up in limbo. I wonder how much valuable information has just dissappeared from the *bay over time. Kind of sucks when you think of it.



"This is a COMPLETE Dubreq PianoMate. This is a 1970s vintage piece of interesting technology from the people who brought you among other things, the Stylophone. It's a simple polyphonic synthesiser working on the divide down principal from a master oscillator (I'm told - i'm not an expert on PianoMates but it seems to work that way.) The idea was that any pianist could add the PianoMate to a piano by attaching the two (bass and treble) two octave bars above the keyboard. The two bars have plungers which sit over the piano keys. when a key is pressed by the player, the plunger is released, makes up a circuit and a note is played by the PianoMate as well. The two (bass and treble) plunger bars are attached by multi-pin plugs to what looks like a small combo amplifier. This has controls for tone, voice, articulation of vibrato, speed of vibrato and master tuning. There's a 'swell' pedal to allow control of the overall volume of the PianoMate and an input and volume control for a microphone. In essence, this clever little box which produced the sounds, controlled them from the plunger bars and amplified them was an ideal addition to a venue where the entertainment was pure piano. It has a makers plate showing the serial number of 1218. At the time these clever little devices came out, there were fewer and fewer venues relying on pianos - second hand organs were becoming cheap enough for even the smallest club and church hall and there were plenty of organ/bass/drums/ trios who would play an evening's cabaret for 30 quid. Thus, Dubreq didn't become the Microsoft of the keyboard industry overnight and not many of these eclectic little oddities survive. Most went to the skip and of those that remained, most lost their plunger bars and ended their working lives as practice amps for guitarists with no money."

New EMS Synthi A Track

Via Paul Evenblij on AH. Title link takes you there. Get's really interesting around 2:00 on. Crazy little synth. Like a little Tasmanian Devil. Track is titled England vs. Australia, so there you go.



Update: Yep, this is pretty much what it sounds like...


(Image courtesy of wikipedia.org)

Two PPG Resources & the Realizer

Some discussion on AH regarding PPG resurfaced. Nothing new, just differences between the Wave 2, 2.2, 2.3 and the Realizer. Thought I'd put up a post to the PPG site, but I then realized there were two! Someone on the list posted to http://www.ppg.synth.net/. It looked familiar but there were a bunch of pictures I haven't seen before, and oddly, I didn't see the PPG Realizer on the site. I searched for the PPG Realizer and found the following site http://www.antarcticamedia.com/ppg/index.htm. That's the site I remember. Anyway, both are worth checking out.

The image below is the PPG Realizer which never made it to market. It would have been the first VA back in 1986, nearly 10 years prior to the first official VA, the Nord Lead in 1995. BTW, it's hard to see but the wireframe synth in the monitor below is the Moog Minimoog. It was one of the featured models.



"An impressive exhibit from PPG was the Realizer (about $50,000). This consists of software versions of familiar synthesizer configurations. It allows you to design your own analog, FM digital, and sampled sounds, patch any of the components of one instrument into another instrument, and then sequence or sample the resulting sound. Wolfgang Palm, designer of the Realizer and head of PPG Instruments, earns the the quote-of-the-show award for explaining how he designed it: 'I copied the circuit diagrams into software.' No easy task."

Update: also see this post for one that went up for sale and links to Wolfgang Palm's notes on the history of the synth and PPG.

Crumar Electric Organ - Free on the *bay

Fully working. Looks like it took 10 days for someone to grab it. Anyone know what model it is? Has a bunch of sliders. Wonder if it's purely organ or one of those synth-organ combos.

Saturday, November 12, 2005

Emulating the Waldorf Pulse OSCs on a Clavia G2

Title link takes you to an interesting post on emulating the Waldorf Pulse oscillators on a G2. Now that's cool. : )

C64 Drum Machine

There is a great post up on the C64 Music! blog on programs that allowed you to use the Commodore 64 as a standard drum machine. If you know of any, hop on over and contribute to the list. I didn't realizer there were so many.

Modded Roland TR-606s are a comin'

A while back, I posted on the knob laden Roland TR-606 on the *bay. Julian announced on AH that he will be offering the full units as finished packages for sale. He's shooting for under 500ukp, which translates to under $871 US. Title link takes you to a bigger shot of the below; no website yet.



http://port23.co.uk/touse/troop.jpg
http://port23.co.uk/touse/stuckon.jpg

The feature set will be:

24 voice controls
8 trigger outputs (fully buffered)
7 trigger inputs
individual switched outputs on all voices, with volume pot on each (toms /
hats no longer share an output)
various outputs and inputs to/from multi oscillator array and noise
generators
trigger leds
3 position kill switches on each voice (off, on/no accent, on/accented as
accent track)

Modular System Workshop - Paris

via Denis on AH. November 18-19. Title link takes you there.

Analog Solutions Vostok


"Each year, Marc Sirguy (the guy behing MESI, the French importer of
most analogue stuff, and also behind Eowave.com) organize an analogue
day(s) and this year it's a Modular Workshop at MESI premises.

There will be "old" modulars around (ARP 2600, Roland system 100m…)
There will be new modulars around (Doepfer, ASys, ASol, Cwejman,
Macbeth M5, Curetronic…)
There will be soft modulars around (Arturia)
There will be some Moog too…

Will be around too, Mr Ken Macbeth himself (cheers!) and some top head
from Arturia (sorry, can't remember the name, oops), and me of course!
;)

It's a very good idea to register (it's a free workshop) before as the
place is not expandable unfortunately, either on phone using +33 (0)1
45 15 41 95 or using info@mesi.fr

18-19/11/05
14h - 20 h
6, rue Marceau - 94200 Ivry/Seine - France
Métro : Pierre Curie - BUS n°132

If you have any questions, I'll try to answer them :)

Denis =G)"

DSI Evolver Video

Update via the comments:

"Axiom said...
Thread updated with two new videos :)"

Cool.

Nice LONG DSI Evolver video. This is literally like testing out a new synth for the first time. You basically get to sit there with him and check out a full range of sounds the Evolver is capable of. Very, very cool. It's a great example of of how bold and full an Evolver can sound as a lead instrument. Via Axiom, via electro-music.com. Title link takes you there.

Minimoog Shot

Great Minimoog shot. Title link takes you to the VSE post where I found it.

Friday, November 11, 2005

EMS-Rehberg Video Synthesizer

This popped up on my randomn picture viewer. I checked the EMS site (title link) and couldn't find this exact unit. I see the EMS Spectre, but it doesn't quite look like this. I did a quick search and didn't find much. If you know anything about it or a good site on it, please feel free to comment.

Emax SE Page and Tribute

Chris Strellis put up a page on his Emax SE with a really nice track featuring nothing but the Emax SE. Nice and gritty. Has a very heavy weight to it. Not completely 4AD, but the weight on tracks of This Mortal Coil definitely come to mind. Well worth checking out. Title link takes you there.

The PorchBoard - Analog Bass

Trip. In via Synth80 on AH, via Harmony Central.



"Designed to revive the lost art of self accompaniment, the Porchboard Bass is an analog rhythm instrument designed to allow low-end, player controlled, self accompaniment using the natural technique of foot tapping. Because it's player controlled, the Porchboard Bass is legitimately accepted in the concert venue. Each tap of the foot produces a low-end, full-bodied, bassy beat that is more percussive than a bass guitar, yet sounds fuller and more resonant than most bass drums."
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