MATRIXSYNTH


Friday, May 25, 2007

ARP 2003 Synthesizer and 3003 Keyboard Controller

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Actually, yes this is an ARP 2500. The 2003 is the synthesizer and the 3003 is the keyboard controller.

Details:
"This is a very rare and early version of the ARP 2500 Modular Synthesizer. It has a larger cabinet with 3 x 5 Modules (instead of 2 x 6 Modules on standard ARP 2500s) and the switch matrix in the top section has 10 positions (instead of the 20 positions on later ARP 2500s). You will probably not miss the extra 10 switch positions as most patching is done on the lower matrix.

The ARP 2500 for sale here has the serial number 014 (model 2003, serial 70 - 014).

I have been told that these very early 2500s were hand-built by the ARP/Tonus crew to the most exacting standards, they are probably better than later models (which of course are excellent as well).

The synthesizer is in technically beautiful condition with all modules working 100%. It has a very powerful and clean sound and is set up for 3 voice multitimbral operation.

I haven't been able to locate the cables for connecting the keyboard to the main cabinet, so I can't guarantee full functionality for the keyboard. Last time I used it (about 10 years ago) it worked fine though.

The ARP 2500 can produce a huge range of sounds from fat to bold to shimmering to weird modulation extravaganzas. It also makes a great companion to a sampler with the capability to filter and modify up to 3 external sound sources. Samples with FM-modulated filters? Very crunchy!
There will be no sound degradation when inserting any external sound sources, the signal path is very quiet and clean sounding.

It has 4 oscillators (2 of them with invertible waveforms), 3 excellent 24dB Filters with resonance and built-in mixers for up to 4 audio and 2 CV signals (5 CV inputs per Filter total), 3 VCAs with built-in mixer for 2 CV signals (plus another 3 fixed voltage CV inputs), 6 Envelope Generators (4 of them with Gate Delays and normal & inverted outputs. All 6 Envelope Generators have a switch for single or multiple triggering), a fixed voltage source (i.e. to shift all Oscillators at once) and a pink/white noise source with built-in filters.

There is also the rather lovely model 1027 analog sequencer with 3x10 steps and individual trigger outs for each step. Voltage controllable pulse width. The internal clock is very fast and can be driven into the audio range. You can modulate it from any source and use it as a signal generator/VCO with a user definable waveshape (by setting the 10 steps of the sequencer to different voltages).

All oscillators/filters/etc. are very stable and easy to tune, very much unlike the modular systems built by Robert Moog (even Wendy Carlos found the ARP oscillators to be far superior to the Moog ones).

I have occasionally heard the complaint that the ARP 2500 doesn't have any "special" or more "esoteric" modules as seen on other modulars. The truth is that EVERY module on the ARP 2500 is special, only that this is not so obvious. The oscillators for example first of all sound excellent, they must rank among the best oscillators ever built. They have a very rich and nuanced sound, full of harmonics. They have an extremely wide audio range, from the lowest frequencies (they can also be used as VC-LFOs) to sounds well beyond the human hearing range. They don't start to "jitter" at any frequency like many other oscillators, even ones on quite expensive modular synthesizers. When cross-modulating or using them for FM, they remain stable and powerful sounding.

Another example for the ARP sound philosophy is the 1027 sequencer. This can function as a standard analog sequencer, but also works as an audio generator by driving it up into the audio range - this can be voltage-controlled, of course.

The closest comparison to an ARP 2500 is probably the Serge 79 modular system, which was built with a similar idea of technological excellence at the service of a great sounding musical instrument.

The power supply has been profesionally modified to work with 220-240 Volts, but can be reverted to 110-120 V operation.

Modules are:

1 - Module 1004-T Oscillator
2 - Module 1004-T Oscillator
3 - Module 1023 Dual Oscillator
4 - Module 1006 FiltAmp (24dB Filter & VCA)
5 - Module 1006 FiltAmp (24dB Filter & VCA)
6 - Module 1006 FiltAmp (24dB Filter & VCA)
7 - Module 1033 Dual Envelope Generator (each with Gate Delay and inverted Outputs)
8 - Module 1046 Quad Envelope (4x Envelope, 2x with Gate Delay, 2x inverted Outputs)
9 - Module 1027 Clocked Sequential Control Module (Double width Module)
10 - Self-built Output Module w/headphone amp
11 - Self-built Pink/White Noise Generator w/Filters & fixed voltage (very useful!)
12 - Module 1002 Power Control Module

Main Cabinet for a maximum of 19 modules, 15 modules with access to modulation matrix.
Keyboard w/ 5 octaves, lower octave with inverse colored keys.

The cabinet is in good condition but has some surface marks and scratches, as can be expected on an instrument close to 40 years old. On the top of the cabinet was a small spot were the surface was damaged, but this has been fixed with antique furniture wax (the wax is fully removable). There was some other small damage to some of the corners and edges of the cabinet, but this has been also fixed in the same way and looks o.k. The previous owner had scratched his initials "RMS" in small letters into one of the Keyboard Modules and into the Power Module of the main cabinet. This is not too visible and has never bothered me.

The keyboard cabinet is in similar condition to the main cabinet, there is some surface damage to the lower left hand corner. Please have a look at the photos below. It shouldn't be too much of an effort for a good carpenter to return the cabinet to its original condition.

This instrument was used in the last 15 years in a non-smoking studio environment and has performed beautifully and flawlessly during this time. I'm sure the next owner will enjoy it for a long time to come."

keybdwizrd - Waldorf Micro Q Demo #1


YouTube via keybdwizrd.
"Some interesting patches on the Waldorf Micro Q synthesizer."

keybdwizrd - Moog Rogue and Little Phatty Comparison


YouTube via keybdwizrd.
"Using the Moog LP synthesizer (2007) to emulate the Moog Rogue (1982)."

Star Wars by the Electric Moog Orchestra

flickr by Terrance Tucker Creative Enterprises.
"The Oscar-Winning Score of STAR WARS is performed on a Moog Synthesizer by the Electric Moog Orchestra. I've often wondered what the music of Star Wars would sound like played on a Moog and I was not disappointed by this LP."

Update: videos below via UniQue Werkx in the comments.


Star Wars - Imperial Attack - The Electric Moog Orchestra
YouTube via breadthechicken | October 19, 2010 |

"Imperial Attack' performed by The Electric Moog Orchestra, 1977. I inserted an existing flipped video clip from my camera, a little shaky, but thought it might be (only slightly) more interesting than the LP cover. MOOG!"

Close Encounters of the Third Kind - Electric Moog Orchestra

MrHopeTelevision | May 09, 2010 |

Roland VP-330 Vocoder Plus by RetroSound


YouTube via retrosound72.

"I play the strings and the human voice section of the VP-330 Vocoder Plus Mk2. The sounds reminds of the Bladerunner Soundtrack by Vangelis."

Korg MS-20 - Frequency modulations


YouTube via Newueel.

Roland G-707

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Details:
"Roland guitar/synth controller. Alone, this guitar has a great tone unlike any other guitar. With a synth, it becomes a very powerful MIDI controller... The best thing about this amazing, guitar is its ability to control the multipin-style guitar synths and get a huge array of sounds."

Roland MKS-80 and MPG-80

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

EK Lounge #10

Title link takes you to more shots on Aliens Project.

via seqeuncer.de.

Reggie on ARP

flickr by daniel spils.

ARP 2600

Moog Box

flickr by Synthesizers.

MOOG Voyager RME CV Expander

ANALOGUE HAVEN 2 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SALE


"ANALOGUE HAVEN 2 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SALE!
If we waited any longer we would be 3, so it is time for...
THE ANALOGUE HAVEN 2 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SALE
THIS FRIDAY May 25 thru THURS May 31.
10% OFF ALL EURORACK MODULES, CASES, AND ACCESSORIES IN STOCK!
This includes ALL IN STOCK items from Doepfer, Analogue Solutions, Bananalogue, Cwejman, Livewire, Plan B, and Synthbox
AND ON EVERYTHING ELSE IN THE STORE...
NO SALES TAX FOR ALL CALIFORNIA CUSTOMERS
FREE UPS GROUND SHIPPING FOR ALL OUT OF STATE DOMESTIC USA CUSTOMERS
This is for ALL orders either in store, on line, or by phone between Fri May 25 and Thursday May 31, 2007
PLEASE NOTE: Discounts do not appear on line. If you order on line, your total will be adjusted before your order ships. You will be contacted with an invoice with appropriate discounts applied for confirmation before you are charged. We know it is a little old school, but we like it that way!"

Title link takes you there.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Waldorf MicroWave 1 Demo Sounds via Dr. George Müller

Title link takes you to them.

"I recorded some demo sounds from my Microwave 1. The sounds are taken from the factory soundset I did back in time for the V2.0 update. Thanks to Christian Claycomb for getting the ball rolling. Enjoy.

Dr. Georg Müller, Uster, 30.08.2001"

ARP Odyssey

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Instant Odyssey
Patch Sheets
Case

Gary's Wiard 300




Gorgeous Wiard 300 shot sent my way via gary. Click the image for the full effect.

Update via gary:

"The coolest thing not shown in this system is the Continuum Fingerboard which is the keyboard controller for this system!

WC = Waveform City
VCO = Classic VCO
SEQ = Sequantizer
Mix = Mixolator
Borg1 = Borg1 Filter
Dual BorgII = 2 1200 series Borg II filters mounted in a 300 package.
Boogie pair = Boogie Lowpass and highpass filters
The Filter = a first generation Wiard filter
Omni Filter = the last generation Wiard state variable filter
Env = Dual Envelator
WB = Woggle Bug
Jag = Joystick Axis Generator
(sidecar top row, left to right) - WC, VCO, WC, VCO, WC, VCO, WC, VCO.
(sidecar bottom row, l to r) - SEQ, SEQ, SEQ, Mix, Borg1, Borg1, Mix, VCO.
(main unit top row, l to r) - dual BorgII, Boogie pair, The Filter, Omni Filter, Mix, Borg1, Borg1, Borg1, mix, mix.
(main unit, bottom row, l to r) - env, env, env, env,mix, env, env, WB, WB, WB.
(console, left) - Plan B Milton Sequencer, Wiard dual joystick controller.
(console, right, top l to r) - Noise ring, PSIM1, 6 Blacet mult attenuators, custom Wiard vca panner.
(console, right, bottom l to r) Joystick, PSIM1, PSIM1, JAG, JAG."

RMI Harmonic Synthesizer Update


See the update I just made to this post.

Nine Inch Nails Being Mixed By Velvet Acid Christ in studio


YouTube via hexfix93 of VAC.
"Nine Inch Nails being mixed by Velvet Acid Christ in the studio. Small clip of how Disease Factory works in the studio. future retro revolution, jomox xbase 09, korg micro x, roland sh-2 and eurorack doepfer plan b and live wire modular"

Sequential Circuits Prophet 10

Shot is via this auction.

Emulator I : Analog Voltage Interface



Remember the Emulator Analog Voltage Interface in this post? Toby dropped by with a link to more info on the Emulator Archives.

DX-7 Super Max

Via Florian on Digital Hell. If anyone knows of a website dedicated to the DX-7 Super Max,post it in the comments and I'll update the post.

"I built in SUPER MAX yesterday evening and I am completely overwhelmed. This is the second most incredible rework of a synthesizer OS after the Europe expansion for the JP6. I definitely recommend it.

Features in short:
- 8 Banks of Memory
- Arpeggiator with very, very good algorithm; provides
32 Arpeggio memories, but these might be not enough for
all usable combinations (not to speak from possible
combinations)
- 3 additional Layer voices with individual tanspose.
- keysplit
- MIDI-echo with transpose
- microtonal tuning
Best of all is: you can send the MIDI-echoes and the Arpeggiator notes separately to the MIDI-Out!

I definitely recommend this. And also the seller bigmanilow is a very reliable person.

Thanks to Lorne for this great hint.

Best regards, Florian"

Sequential Circuits 'The Patch' for download

via Stephen Jones on AH:

"I asked Dave Smith and John Bowen about 'The Patch' and it seems that only 3 or 4 issues were published between 1981 and 1982. I have volume 02 issue 01 (February 1982). Its got some really great information, patches and advertisements. This issue has a cool picture of a plexiglas Pro-One too.

You can download it here.

Does anyone have the other issues of 'The Patch'? (I'll stop asking now)"

Update via the comments:
"Did anyone see the "Digital Interface for the Pro-One" article in there? That is like the holy grain for Pro-One DIYers. I don't think anyone has documented how to modify the Pro-One for this and here it is from the source."

The Human League - Interview (Phil)


YouTube via interjet. Via JZ. E-Mu Emulator.
"Interview With Phil on ITV 1 TV AM Back in 1983"

Effector 13 : Synth Mangler : Mangled Synth!


"Synth love courtesy of : PLEXUS :
That's a pre-OohLaLa / Jason Myrold era Synth Mangler.
More sonic doom below :
http://www.effector13.com/
http://www.deviever.com/"

Thomas Henry Strikes Again

via Scott Stites on this electro-music thread. Sample at the post (it sounds gooood).

"From way up north, Mankato way, land of a thousand lakes and even more synth designs, comes a new VCO design from Thomas Henry. Grab your spare 3080 and put it in a safe place.....

Thomas calls it a workhorse VCO - Expo FM, Lin FM, triangle, PWM and one hell of a pure sine wave. On top of that, in typical Thomas Henry fashion, it is an elegantly simple design - I was amazed at how quickly I breadboarded it. But, don't let the simplicity fool you - this thing has got an *amazingly* accurate 9 octave range and it plays beautifully. I love this little VCO already. Page to come, schematics, PCB layout, the works.

Here's a quick sample of it - no big musical event, just the VCO piped through the Mankato filter I've had on breadboard since the summer of 2004. I modulate it here and there with an LFO, and the PW is modulated by another LFO (the wave heard is the PWM wave). And, of course, I use my patented Too Much Reverb(R) effect. Of course, it's the Thomas Henry keyboard controlling it.

Remember, this is with no tempco with a patch held together with alligator clips. I spent about three minutes tuning the VCO (it tuned easier than any VCO I've ever dealt with, don't know why - of course, I haven't tuned it to the gnat's ass yet - I'm having too much fun Very Happy ).

Coming soon to an Internet Near You.

Scott"

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Remembering Bob Moog

Amos wrote into AH letting us all know Bob Moog would have been 73 today. Happy birthday Bob, wherever you are.

Image via Robotspeak, where you will find an interview with Bob from 10/29/04.

Update: I just received the following from the Bob Moog Memorial Foundation:
"Remembering Dad:
"The Best Birthday Present Ever"
I own a gift store in downtown Asheville. About five years ago, I happen to be working on my birthday. About an hour after I opened, I was in the back of store setting up a display. It was a quiet spring day and the doors were wide open. I was quietly working away.

My solitude was suddenly and wonderfully interrupted by Dad, who was standing at my front doors singing “Happy Birthday” to me at the top of his lungs. He was so into it. He was waving his arms up and down with the beat, bending his knees and singing so loudly that they heard it half way down the block. I’ve never smiled so much, nor have I ever been more touched.

Dad never really liked celebrating birthdays in the conventional sense because the idea of giving a gift just because you were supposed to troubled him on a deep intellectual level. But hell, who needs a gift when you’ve got your Dad at your door, bellowing out the birthday theme?

Today is Dad’s birthday. He would have been 73. I’m taking the day off to remember him……and to sing to him.

Send Bob a Birthday note--share your Moog Stories at our website.
Take a moment out today to reflect on how Dad touched your life, how he inspired your creativity, how he changed the face of music.

May Moog be with you,
Michelle Moog-Koussa
Executive Director, The Bob Moog Memorial Foundation for Electronic Music
Make Waves. Support Bob's Legacy."

And of course, via MOOG Music:
Happy Birthday Bob - May 23, 1934
Ileana Grams-Moog, Michelle Moog-Koussa, Moog Music President Mike Adams and the Moog Music family gathered today to celebrate Bob's birthday and legacy.

The Top 100 Synths According to the A-Z of Analog Synths

via Ethan Callendar in the comments of this post. Thank you Ethan! Click the image to shoot Peter an email on the availability of the A-Z Books. I have them and they are very, very good - an absolute must have for synth enthusiasts.

"Here are the top 100 according to Peter Forrest's "A-Z of Analogue Synthesisers:

1. Moog Memorymoog (LAM)
2. Roland MKS-80 (w/MPG-80 + MKB-1000)
3. Sequential Circuits Prophet-5 (Rev 3)
4. Moog Memorymoog Plus
5. Sequential Circuits Prophet-10
6. Sequential Circuits Prophet-5 (Rev 2)
7. Oberheim Matrix-12
8. Sequential Circuits Prophet-T8
9. Moog Original Prototype
10. Oberheim Xpander

ARP Axxe and Little Brother

via this auction. Cool advert. I actually put this one up on Matrixsynth-b first, but thought it looked pretty cool, so I put it up here as well.

RMI Harmonic Synthesizer



via this auction

Click here for more pics.

Details: "You are bidding on a keyboard from a estate, this keyboard was played in the 70s and was stored away for the past 20 years. We plugged in the keyboard and all keys work nice including all the lighted buttons and the left and right equalizers, we did try to test most functions however we are not totally familiar with this equipment so we cannot guarantee every function works perfect. The keyboard looks to be well taken care of. It has a case and 4 steel legs that fold up. We would rather this be a local pick up however we can ship this item.

HISTORY

Roland 80017a

The dreaded chip that takes the Juno-106 out. Title link takes you to shots via this auction. Docs with mp3s and shots also saved here. See this post for an alternative replacement chip.

Details:
Roland 80017a Replacement VCA/VCF chip for Juno-106/ MKS-30/ GR-700/ HS60
Problems Typically Solved by Replacing the Failed 80017a Chip Include:
* Erratic or sudden loud noise from synthesizer output, particularly after 10 minutes of powering up.
* Note hang-ups or long sustain.
* One synth voice will not respond to filter or amplifier changes.
* Unstable operation.
* Juno-106 or MKS-30: Notes will not play, most typically every 6th note will not play due to failed 80017a chip.
* GR-700: One particular voice or string will not sound, "D" string, "A" string etc.

About the 80017a VCA/VCF chip:

The 80017a chip was a real workhorse for Roland synthesizer engineers in the early 1980s. This one chip contained both the classic, driving -24 dB voltage controlled low-pass filter with a smooth voltage controlled amplifier. By placing all the components on one chip, Roland was able to keep the classic sound of their analog synthesizers across various products, with low production costs. Almost immediately Roland knew they had a problem on their hands, and changed production methods.

When these chips fail, sometimes voice will stop working completely. On a keyboard synth, this shows up as every sixth voice not working. On a GR-700 guitar synthesizer, this shows up as one string’s synthesizer voice failing. But the chips may not fail completely, resulting in a lack of control over the filter quality for one voice, or by sudden, loud erratic sounds from the synthesizer. The only solution to these problems is to replace the existing 80017a with a new chip.

This chip is from lot 44, produced after Roland solved the manufacturing problems. Probably 20 years after the original production date, this chip is still working well without failure."

Demos:
Failed Chip
Good Chip

"There are four audio samples of the open string "D." The first audio sample has both resonance and filter cutoff tracking the envelope generator. The VCA is set to "gate," no VCA modulation. This sample highlights the resonance effect. The next sample has the resonance turned off, and only the filter cutoff is modulated. Again the VCA is set to "gate," no VCA modulation. The third sample has the filter wide open, with the VCA being modulated by the envelope. This is to highlight VCA modulation. The last patch is a complex modulation patch of the filter with sample and hold qualities. The mp3 file is a little over one minute in length. There is silence at the beginning, and the sample was normalized to make it as loud as possible."

Update via the comments:
"The statement that there are good lots (date codes) for these chips is completely untrue. I've seen all date codes from 40A to 61A fail."

Update: Looks like there is another one up for auction.

Yamaha QY300


Click here for shots via this auction.

Details:
Professional Sequencer
A large 53,000- note memory with S-RAM back up for maximum of ten user songs. 16 sequencing tracks and 8 pattern tracks. Chord track and a tempo track. The QY300 allows you to quantize, clock shift and create customized swing, gate and velocity values in real time. Editing features include copy and paste jobs for specified phrase and passage between a sequencer track and phrases as well as between songs.

Innovative Data Base
3093-phrase data-base enables you to select just the right musical passage. This large data-base includes drum, percussion, bass, guitar and keyboard phrases you use to create your own accompaniment. Create, edit and store 100 personalized phrases. The floppy disk supplied patterns consist of 100 programmed style variations from Rave to Rock, Rumba to Reggae and much more. Each style offers eight options including Intro., Normal, Variation, four Fills, and Ending phrases for custom accompaniment production. You can make a maximum of 100 personalized styles, with eight sections each. These original styles can be stored on a floppy disk for future use.

Harmonious Music
Twenty-seven chord types from major to minor and diminished to augmented and more are available. The QY300 can re-harmonize phrases and patterns according to any chords you select in the pattern track.

Easy Access Interface

Easy access interface and large LCD graphic display allow accurate procedures to be done quickly and easily. Menu buttons, Data and Shuttle dials, cursor buttons and numeric computer style keys are included for fast location, selection and edit procedures.

Tone Generator
Top quality GM compatible 128 voice AWM tone generator with 8 drum kits plus an integrated effects processor based on Yamaha's proven DSP technology. The built-in mini-keyboard to produce up to 28-note polyphony with Dynamic Voice Allocation.

Data Storage and Compatibility
Equipped with a 2DD 3.5" floppy disk drive so that you can store, retrieve and organize large amounts of musical data. It loads and saves in Standard MIDI File and ESEQ formats including Yamaha's Clavinova.


Sequencer/ No. of Tracks Song mode: 19 tracks (TR1...TR16, Pattern, Chord, Tempo) Pattern mode: 8 tracks (TR1...TR8) Phrase mode: 1 track
Sequencer/ Data Capacity Approximately 53,000 notes (battery-backed) 10 songs. 800 user patterns (100 styles x 8 sections) 100 user phrases.
Sequencer/ Preset Phrases 3093 phrases
Sequencer/ Record Modes Realtime, Step, Punch-in
Sequencer/ Preset Chords 28 types (including "thru")
Sequencer/ Note Resolution 96 clocks per quarter note
Sequencer/ Polyphony 32 notes
Sequencer/ Play effect Quantize, Swing, Transpose, Clock Shift, Gate Time Modify, Velocity Modify
Finger Chord Chord Root, Chord Type, On Bass, Original Bass
Sequence File Format QY3000 Original Format, ESEQ, SMF
Tone Generator/ Type AWM (Advanced Wave Memory)
Tone Generator/ Max. Polyphony 28 notes (with dynamic voice allocation)
Tone Generator/Multi-timbre Parts Song mode:24 (sequence track 16 + pattern 8) Pattern mode:8 Phrase mode:single
Tone Generator/ Voices 128 normal voices (GM Level 1) and 8 drum kits
Tone Generator/ Effect Parameters Hall 1, Hall 2 , Room 1, Room 2, Plate 1, Plate 2, Delay 1, Delay 2
Display 64 x 240 dot graphic liquid crystal display
External Memory 3.5" 2DD- type floppy disk drive
Connectors Phones Output x 2 (L/Mono, R) DC In MIDI In, Out
Power Supply PA-1207 or equivalent AC adaptor
Dimensions 343 (W) x 238.2 (D) x 64.7 (H) mm (13-1/2" (W) x 9-3/8" (D) x 2-1/2" (H))
Weight 2.1 kg (4 lbs 10 oz)

[Prt23.net] Drumatix modification

Title link takes you to another Roland TR-606 mod site. Also check out NumberOfTheBeast (previous posts).

via Rogo in the comments of this post.

Maker Faire via CDM

Title link takes you there.

"Homebrewed Theremin by Barney the Theremin Wizard at the Chips + Music + Fish "after party" organized by Make Magazine and blog/ community Create Digital Music. The image in the background comes from a vintage training film for electricians, which just happened to be running at the venue for a later performance."

Coldcut - Atomic moog video (2000)


YouTube via vonoben.

Recording an MPC500 to PC


YouTube via Lovesign. via Failed Muso.

MaoMakMaa Tique Tone : 555 Timer Experimental Drum Synth


YouTube via maomakmaa.
"This wicked circuit experiment gives hours and hours of different bleeps and klonckcz, bassdrum-like sounds and rhythms. I created this on a breadboard with 2x 555 Timer and 1x 556 Timer.
I`ll work on this circuit and release the pcb layout,schematic and more.
I added a MS-20 Filter Clone from FolkUrbanMusic: link, and an amplifier from runoffgroove.com, Little Gem v.3.0 12 Potis,4 Switches,5 nice flickering LEDs"
via sendling

Heaven for Chris


flickr by quasarsglow.

"Surrounded by things he loves. The place had about 250 individual musical instrument stores."

Reminds me of FiveG. Anyone know where this is?

Update via QuasarsGlow in the comments:
"It is in Seoul, South Korea. The place is huge. Its called Nagwon or Nangwon. I forget which, but yes, about 2-300 shops full of musical kit. Loads of pianos, guitars, brass, woodwinds, synths, effects pedals. Chris in the photo ended up buying a Mu-tron biphase effects pedal and a left-handed cutaway acoustic guitar for about $700US all told."

Top 20 Greatest Synths - Episode 8

The final episode is in.

KORG Poly-61

Title link takes you to more shots of Gabor's first synth.

Imagine seeing that on a hike.

confusedmachines



http://www.confusedmachines.com/

"This site will one day detail modifications (mods) to all sorts of electronic instruments. For now however, it documents mods of my Roland TR-606, turning it into a Roland TR-666. The TR-666 is a beast that is part 606, part 808 and part devil.

Basically, as you can see from my pictures, I've added 19 new knobs (one is internal), and a switch to a Roland TR-606 to allow for some pretty smooth or freaky sound control. The new controls are:

BD. Tune, Tone, Decay, Pitch. (also internal max. decay limit)
SD. Tune, Snappy, Decay
HT. Tune
LT. Tune, Pitch
HH (common). LPF, BPF
OHH. Decay
CHH. Decay
CY. BPF (common to HH also), BPF (separate), Decay
System Noise Amount.
Tempo Fine Tune"

Title link takes you to more info including samples and a close-up of the knob box.
via mc in the comments of this post.

Access Virus Classic

via this auction.

Oberheim FVS-1 Synth Programmer Panel

via this auction.
Details:
"This is the front panel from an Oberheim FVS-1 or EVS-1 Polyphonic Synth Programmer. This is one of the very rare ones with reversed graphics, and is black with white lettering. Completely original and very rare Oberheim part. I have been told that they only built 2 of each model in black to take to the trade shows, and made 1 small batch of these blackface panels. This one appears to have been installed in a Programmer, but is in excellent condition and is a really neat piece of Oberheim history."

Roland SH-3

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

ARP Odyssey and Patch Book

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Doepfer A-100

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

2x Standard VCO A-110
1x Ring Modulator A-114
1x Noise/Random A-118
1x VCF1 A-120 (24dB low pass 1)
1 x logarithmic VCA A-131
1 x logarithmi Mixer A-138b
1 x ADSR A-140
1 x LFO A-145
1 x MIDI-to-CV/Gate/Sync Interface A-190

Roland GR-33B Bass Guitar Synthesizer and G-88 Bass

Title link takes you to a page dedicated to the Roland GR-33B and G-88 with more images, samples, videos and general info.

via this auction.

Poly Evolver Keyboard!!

Title link takes you to shots via this auction.

Anyone know of any other synths with an "!?"

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

WHAT THE FUTURE SOUNDED LIKE


YouTube via VCS3DOCO.
"Film teaser for the documentary What The Future Sounded Like - the story of the Electronic Music Studios and their impact on music history." More info and shots
Upate: link to the official site.

The Qasar II

This is actually part two of the article posted below on the EMS VCS1. I'm putting up a separate post so there is not confusion with EMS.

"The Qasar II & M8 - towards the Fairlight CMI
Around 1965, Tony Furse became interested in the digital synthesis of sound. His early experiments in this field were small flip-flop circuits. These experiments soon advanced and by the early 1970s Tony had completed a prototype digital/analog hybrid synthesiser - the Qasar. Unfortunately the completion of this prototype coincided with the release of the minimoog synthesiser, a cheaper analog synthesiser. Because the Qasar relied upon expensive microprocessor technology, any ideas for a production model of the Qasar were effectively squashed."

The EMS VCS1

"In 1983 the Powerhouse museum purchased the music and recording instruments that comprised the Australian composer Don Banks' electronic music studio. The contents of this studio include the EMS VCS 1 (Electronic Music Studios Voltage Controlled Synthesiser attempt #1), a prototype for the VCS 3 - the first portable synthesiser."

Title link takes you to the full article.

New Electrix Products Coming 2008

Top down:
Filter Factory 2.o
Repeater 2.0
MoFX 2.0
Warp Factory 2.0
Title link takes you to more info. You can get OS 2.0 for your existing repeater as well. You can see the previous Repeater in use here.
via brian comnes
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