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Thread: Synthesizer Gear Porn ;-)

  1. #51
    Member Gizmotron's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    Awesome!! See, I started during the "dark ages" for synths...my first was the Roland U-20, which was about as far from the "one knob/button/fader per function" as you could get. It wasn't Yamaha DX-7 levels of buried complexity, but definitely wasn't exactly the most intuitive device either

    The other nice thing about the softies is for quick sketchpad-type work. Even if the initial sounds are 100% exact, I can bang out a track fairly quickly in broad strokes, then work backwards to flesh things out with more "specific" sounds as needed. For example, I will ultimately track leads with the Voyager but for quick work I can use the virtual Minimoog and have something laid down in a few minutes. That way, I spend the creative part of the process being creative, and the production/sound-design part of the process can come later on. If that makes sense
    That makes perfect sense. Some of us--me especially--are very sensitive to having the muse killed by too much fiddling. If I have to fight the process, nothing gets recorded.

    And while I started on a 2600 back in 1980, it was a friend's (I sure wish I had one today!). My first synths (other than a cheapy Casio) were acquired in 1985 and were Korgs (DW 6000, EX-800) and a TX-7 mated to my KX-88.

  2. #52
    I am super envious of those early boards of yours! I know some of it is the rosy-tinted lenses of nostalgia kicking in but still...starting on a 2600? That is soooo cool.

    Before the U-20 I did have a Casio that was kind of interesting...it had mini-keys and was clearly one of those "touch one button and BOOM! Instant samba groove" gadgets...but, it also had a tiny few sliders that controlled some filtering of the sound. It broke years ago and I tossed it...man, I regret not holding onto that one.
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  3. #53
    Member Gizmotron's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    I am super envious of those early boards of yours! I know some of it is the rosy-tinted lenses of nostalgia kicking in but still...starting on a 2600? That is soooo cool.

    Before the U-20 I did have a Casio that was kind of interesting...it had mini-keys and was clearly one of those "touch one button and BOOM! Instant samba groove" gadgets...but, it also had a tiny few sliders that controlled some filtering of the sound. It broke years ago and I tossed it...man, I regret not holding onto that one.
    Yup, my MT-40 was that way:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8vzxWhWr-4

    I gave away the DW-6000 to a deserving friend. I still have the EX-800 module but it has that fault that some develop where it plays in a different key! (That is great for looking good at a jam session...NOT!) But I do have pretty much all that I ever bought, including a Casio CZ-1000. I finally got a Roland JD-800 recently. That is so much fun to twist knobs on.

    By the way, that college roomie with the ARP 2600? He also had a renovated 1887 Steinway (about 6'), a mellotron 400, and for a while, an ARP Pro- Soloist. The latter was my favorite...one could instantly be Tony Banks. Of course, it was pretty cool to be around the Mellotron! What a bizarre device that was.

  4. #54
    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    Me? Oh crap...let's see:

    Hardware:

    Alesis QS-8 (for my main piano/controller, although I sometimes use an onboard sound or two)
    Roland XP-30, JV-880, U-220, MKS-50, Fantom X6
    Korg MS2000 (also have a Karma gathering dust in a closet)
    Moog Voyager plus various CV breakout boxes, with effects from Moogerfoogers Clusterflux, Ring Modulator, FreqBox, and Midi Murf. Plus Minifooger overdrive and delay.
    Moog Minitaur
    Moog Slim Phatty
    Moog Werkstatt
    Hammond XM-2

    I also have various weirdo devices that I've picked up over the years like a Tocante Karper (killer for crazy drones), Bastl MicroGranny (pocket granular sampler), a Kaoscillator and a few of the Teenage Engineering Pocket Operators. Oh! And to try and get just a LITTLE of that CS-80 love I have the new Yamaha Reface CS

    Finally, I have my beastly pride and joy: a Eurorack modular built around a MakeNoise B+G shared system. In truth, that's where I spent much of my time these days...just wiring various shiat up and seeing what comes out the other side. I'm fascinated by the possibilities, especially exploring stuff like what Subotnick did with the old Buchla systems.

    Here are a couple of shots (the studio shot is a year old...I've just replaced the old mixer with a Presonus and retired the Roland U-20 after over 25 years of wonderful service ).

    Attachment 9605Attachment 9606
    Looks great. I have to settle for my V Collection.

  5. #55
    Quote Originally Posted by Rarebird View Post
    Looks great. I have to settle for my V Collection.
    The V-Collection is pretty damned fantastic! For the money, that's a remarkably large and solid-sounding set of modules.

    One thing I'd love to see at some point is Roland produce a soft synth sample library collecting all the various sounds from their 80's era: the D, U, and J series. I know those aren't AS popular (and somewhat with fair reason), but for me, that'd be a godsend...to have access to all those sounds rather than having to take my rackmounts into the shop for routine tune-ups.
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  6. #56
    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    The V-Collection is pretty damned fantastic! For the money, that's a remarkably large and solid-sounding set of modules.

    One thing I'd love to see at some point is Roland produce a soft synth sample library collecting all the various sounds from their 80's era: the D, U, and J series. I know those aren't AS popular (and somewhat with fair reason), but for me, that'd be a godsend...to have access to all those sounds rather than having to take my rackmounts into the shop for routine tune-ups.
    How about the old Roland System 100? I still have my model 101.

  7. #57
    I think they have some software emulations of the 100? I think that might be part of the whole plug-out thingy that Roland does these days...
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  8. #58
    Member hFx's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    The V-Collection is pretty damned fantastic! For the money, that's a remarkably large and solid-sounding set of modules.

    One thing I'd love to see at some point is Roland produce a soft synth sample library collecting all the various sounds from their 80's era: the D, U, and J series. I know those aren't AS popular (and somewhat with fair reason), but for me, that'd be a godsend...to have access to all those sounds rather than having to take my rackmounts into the shop for routine tune-ups.
    This 80's digital collection is quite OK - only D50 of the Roland's though...

    https://www.uvi.net/digital-synsations.html

    And there is the discontinued Roland Vari OS rack that comes with some classic synths.
    My Progressive Workshop at http://soundcloud.com/hfxx

  9. #59
    Quote Originally Posted by hFx View Post
    This 80's digital collection is quite OK - only D50 of the Roland's though...

    https://www.uvi.net/digital-synsations.html

    And there is the discontinued Roland Vari OS rack that comes with some classic synths.
    Oh wow...the Digital Synsations sounds very tempting. Had no idea that existed, thanks VERY much for pointing it out!
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  10. #60
    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    Before the U-20 I did have a Casio that was kind of interesting...it had mini-keys and was clearly one of those "touch one button and BOOM! Instant samba groove" gadgets...but, it also had a tiny few sliders that controlled some filtering of the sound. It broke years ago and I tossed it...man, I regret not holding onto that one.
    I still have my Casio MT-100, which is like that. Chintzy built-in rhythms, clacky push-buttons, “auto-chord,” the works. It has a Graphic Equalizer which doesn’t seem to do a whole lot of anything. Still works like a champ, and I have NOT treated it kindly!

    For “real” playing, I have my M-Audio Keystation 49e and some soft synths.

    Quote Originally Posted by hFx View Post
    This 80's digital collection is quite OK - only D50 of the Roland's though...
    Someone on here said he had a D50 (or maybe some other kind of Roland like a D20), a DX7, a bunch of other 80s digital synths, that he only used as MIDI controllers controlling vintage sounds on soft synths. The idea was to play a DX7 and have the sound of, say, a Mini-Moog come out.
    Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...

  11. #61
    Member hFx's Avatar
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    I've owned and used most iconic synths of the early digital era (D50, DX7, M1, Wavestation) at the time. It's nice to be able to recreate those with software (NI FM8, Korg Legacy, Synstation) but honestly - mostly I use the software to recreate/remix stuff I did in the late 80s and early 90s, and I don't even concider using them in recent productions. I feel the sounds are too iconic, however great I find them
    My Progressive Workshop at http://soundcloud.com/hfxx

  12. #62
    Quote Originally Posted by Progbear View Post
    I still have my Casio MT-100, which is like that. Chintzy built-in rhythms, clacky push-buttons, “auto-chord,” the works. It has a Graphic Equalizer which doesn’t seem to do a whole lot of anything. Still works like a champ, and I have NOT treated it kindly!
    Oh snap, here it is!!! I had the MT-400V. I remember specifically because it had the separate speakers you could detach:

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-EcgSDf9wiI...-Q/s1600/2.jpg

    And check out that little chunk of synthy-editing joy on there...

    http://medias.audiofanzine.com/image...00v-303249.jpg

    It was a weird but very cool little device.
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  13. #63
    Member hFx's Avatar
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    One of the more exciting yet almost forgotten polysynths... Maybe because it's not very reliable and it was never updated to to solve those problems.

    My Progressive Workshop at http://soundcloud.com/hfxx

  14. #64
    One of the last really amazing analog synths from the first wave: the Oberheim Matrix-12:



    More of a recent, boutique item, the JoMox Sunsyn:

    Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...

  15. #65
    Member rcarlberg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by battema View Post
    Is it actually in production yet? I've seen vids of this thing on the expo circuit for a few years but never actually come across one for sale.
    Quote Originally Posted by Schmidt-synthesizer.com
    Since Schmidt is hand-made in fairly small quantities, it is sold exclusively and directly through EMC and a handful of selected dealers.

    Please place your order via this form. As soon as we have received your inquiry, we will get back to you with information on current availability and delivery times.
    ..

  16. #66
    Member Plasmatopia's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gizmotron View Post
    Yup, my MT-40 was that way:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8vzxWhWr-4

    I gave away the DW-6000 to a deserving friend. I still have the EX-800 module but it has that fault that some develop where it plays in a different key! (That is great for looking good at a jam session...NOT!) But I do have pretty much all that I ever bought, including a Casio CZ-1000. I finally got a Roland JD-800 recently. That is so much fun to twist knobs on.

    By the way, that college roomie with the ARP 2600? He also had a renovated 1887 Steinway (about 6'), a mellotron 400, and for a while, an ARP Pro- Soloist. The latter was my favorite...one could instantly be Tony Banks. Of course, it was pretty cool to be around the Mellotron! What a bizarre device that was.

    Seeing that little Casio reminded me that a local band used to use something like that and they would scream into it for a vocoder type effect? I believe this tune is an example of the sound it would produce (around the 0:35 mark):

    <sig out of order>

  17. #67
    Had a brief irrational moment last week when I discovered my personal holy grail (Yamaha CS-80 in excellent condition) for sale within driving distance. The $23,000 price tag kind of killed the moment though...couldn't justify buying a keyboard that would cost twice as much as the car used for the pickup
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  18. #68
    Quote Originally Posted by Progbear View Post
    This German company once made a DX-Programmer for Yamaha’s DX-line of synths. It was basically just this big board full of knobs!
    Jellinghaus, I believe they were called, and they didn't make very many of them. One of my Facebook friends is a UK based synth tech, who recently worked on one. Not only was it "a big board of knobs", but it was actually larger than the DX-7 itself.

    As I recall, Roland made similar devices for the JX-3P, JX-8P, GR-700, and GR-77B synths, but they were much smaller.

    The CS-80 is probably the most beloved synth of its era, perhaps of all time.
    Was it really? I always thought the Minimoog Model D and the Prophet-5 were the most beloved synths. I remember, in the mid 80's Keyboard magazine doing a book that was basically a compilation of all their synth product reviews, and it was noted in the opening of the book that the Minimoog was still being used for basslines on records, even though Moog Music had stopped making it several years later.

    I always liked the keyboard rigs to the two synth players in the band Berlin used onstage. Matt Reid had a Prophet-5 and a DX-7, and David Diamond had just a Prophet-5.

    I have a small Eurorack modular synth I'm putting together myself. So far, I have an Intellijel Atlantis, an Intellijel ring modulator (which I'm kinda disappointed with), a Doepfer Wasp filter, a Doepfer MIDI interface (when I want to play conventional melodic stuff, I use this old Yamaha SHS-10 that my parents bought me about 18 years ago), a Make Noise STO, a Blue Lantern skewable LFO, a Blue Lantern Simple ADSR, and a Blue Lantern Sir Mix-A-Lot. Oh yeah, and I have this Synthrotek delay module that I'm not all that crazy about (more useful for making noise than actual conventional delay effects). I've got all of this in a nice portable Synthrotek case. It's not quite as "James Bond approved" as the old EMS Synthi-A, but it's still pretty neat to have.

  19. #69
    Quote Originally Posted by hFx View Post
    One of the more exciting yet almost forgotten polysynths... Maybe because it's not very reliable and it was never updated to to solve those problems.

    My undrestanding is, it was the Memorymoog Plus that was unreliable, the one with the MIDI interface and the on-board sequencer. As I recall, the original Memorymoog was just fine, but somehow the additional bells and whistles on the Plus model caused it to become unstable.

    I thought I Had heard someone eventually figured out a way to fix the problems with the Memorymoog Plus, but I might be mistaken.

    I remember when I was a teenager, I used to hang out a music store, where they had a Memorymoog Plus. So one day, I'm in there, one of the salesmen says, "Check this out", goes over to the Memorymoog, hits the start button on the sequencer, and the Baba O'Riley intro comes flying out. The owner's brother (who didn't particularly) says, "Great! Now he's never going to leave!". lol

    I'd still like to have one of those, though, along with a Prophet-5 and a Matrix 12.

  20. #70
    Quote Originally Posted by GuitarGeek View Post
    Jellinghaus, I believe they were called, and they didn't make very many of them. One of my Facebook friends is a UK based synth tech, who recently worked on one. Not only was it "a big board of knobs", but it was actually larger than the DX-7 itself.

    As I recall, Roland made similar devices for the JX-3P, JX-8P, GR-700, and GR-77B synths, but they were much smaller.



    Was it really? I always thought the Minimoog Model D and the Prophet-5 were the most beloved synths. I remember, in the mid 80's Keyboard magazine doing a book that was basically a compilation of all their synth product reviews, and it was noted in the opening of the book that the Minimoog was still being used for basslines on records, even though Moog Music had stopped making it several years later.

    I always liked the keyboard rigs to the two synth players in the band Berlin used onstage. Matt Reid had a Prophet-5 and a DX-7, and David Diamond had just a Prophet-5.

    I have a small Eurorack modular synth I'm putting together myself. So far, I have an Intellijel Atlantis, an Intellijel ring modulator (which I'm kinda disappointed with), a Doepfer Wasp filter, a Doepfer MIDI interface (when I want to play conventional melodic stuff, I use this old Yamaha SHS-10 that my parents bought me about 18 years ago), a Make Noise STO, a Blue Lantern skewable LFO, a Blue Lantern Simple ADSR, and a Blue Lantern Sir Mix-A-Lot. Oh yeah, and I have this Synthrotek delay module that I'm not all that crazy about (more useful for making noise than actual conventional delay effects). I've got all of this in a nice portable Synthrotek case. It's not quite as "James Bond approved" as the old EMS Synthi-A, but it's still pretty neat to have.
    Some suggestions for you:

    I am a huge MakeNoise nut, and just about anything they put out is at least worthy of note. Based on your above, you might consider looking into their Optomix dual lowpass gate or LxD (which is kind of like the Optomix without the front controls, but also has some resonance that usually isn't present). Their Modemix is also lovely and if you have any interest in a west coast synthesis approach, the Wobblebug is absolutely essential. And in terms of bang for the buck in a small space, the Telharmonic almost rivals the DPO for versatility and cool sounds.

    I also love the Maths module so much I bought a second one...but, they aren't the cheapest of modules. As close to a true "swiss army knife" Eurorack modules as I've come across, though.

    I have quite a few Intellijel modules as well, but with the Atlantis you probably have most of those bases covered already

    One kind of fun one that doesn't always get mentioned is the Moskwa from Xaoc Devices. It's this very cool rotor-shaped 8 stage sequencer that is loads of fun to use and tweak: http://xaocdevices.com/main/moskwa/

    Eurorack is an awesome (and dangerously addictive) thing
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  21. #71
    For you serious Vintage GTR whores....(like me)..................the vintage Fender Jazzmasters & Jags are to DIE FOR !!



    https://reverb.com/news/the-songbird...place-on-earth
    G.A.S -aholic

  22. #72
    Guitars? This is a synthesizer thread! We don't need no steeenking guitars!!



    Actually, I've been told my pedalboard for my Voyager rivals some guitarists
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  23. #73
    I got lazy and didn't feel like starting (or appending) a new thread.....
    G.A.S -aholic

  24. #74
    For those of us suffering incurable gear lust, all is always forgiven
    If you're actually reading this then chances are you already have my last album but if NOT and you're curious:
    https://battema.bandcamp.com/

    Also, Ephemeral Sun: it's a thing and we like making things that might be your thing: https://ephemeralsun.bandcamp.com

  25. #75
    Member Gizmotron's Avatar
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    Yeppers, I swing most ways so a mention of almost any instrument is OK.

    There is something to be said for specialization; one can go very far with one main passion. But I find that being a jack-of-all-trades has some wonderful advantages. Being able to play a little bit on many instruments allows one to be quite informed and be a better composer.

    But there is something so wonderful about the world of synths.

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