MATRIXSYNTH


Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Blacet Design Contest Results In

Well, the results are in. The grand prize of a $100 Blacet gift certificate went to KH's "Phase Spread Module". There wasn't a shot of it, so no image for this post.

Here are the details:
"The bottom jack is the input of an audio signal. The pot space is called "phase spread", and it controls the spread of phase shift in the 4 output jacks. Fully counter clockwise, all out 4 outputs are in phase. Fully clockwise, bottom #1 is in phase, next up is #2 at 90 degrees out, #3 at 180, #4 (top) back in phase at 360 degrees. Variable in-between. The outputs could be put through a mixer for filtering effects." Title link takes you to more.

Sonoric Instruments

Interesting. Title link takes you there. There are samples and some images. Note the site is still under construction and is missing a bit of content. This is your first look at what might be coming from them.



Update: According to this post on Sonic State, the Sonoric synths might actually be based on the Anadigm chipset. You might remember this post on Anadigm using the Andromeda A6 in there graphics as well as this one on Retro Thing speculating how Anadigm chips could be used in a low cost Polymoog.

Some notes from the thread:
"It's a synth that was built with a analog modular synth in mind for the first time, controlled digitally by software on a PC. In time, he realized that for start it would be better to have "scenes", rather than making it completly modular. I don't think he droped the idea, but right now he will make some default "scenes", this means that if you need for example Korg MS10 or 20 architecture you can have it. Or maybe Arp 2600, or Minimoog, or anything...I don't know what it would be, really. Of course it will not sound exactly like the original, but at least it will sound analog, not like a digital emulation. As you can easily hear on the website it's really fat. Or phat;) The cool thing is that the character of the filter can be changed from software.

The oscillators and multimode filters are analogue, the modulations digital (lfo's, env's). You can have a lot of filters and oscillators. 16 if I remember well. "

The Vermona Mephisto

This one via Mr. Array in the comments of this post. Another synth that could have been. I wanted one of these bad. Gorgeous analog synth that was going to have motorized knobs. I say chuck the motorized knobs and release it for less. I can just see my daughter trying to hold one if its knobs in place while flipping through presets. Ouch... BTW, just realized Mr. Array has his own blog! Guys, you need to let me know about these things. I've added it to my blog roll on the right.



* 6 Stimmen
* 3 Voltage Controlled Oscillators (VCO)
* 1 Envelope Generator - Oscillators
* 2 Low Frequency Oscillators (LFO)
* 2 Envelope Generators
* Voltage Controlled Filter (VCF)
* Voltage Controlled Amplifier (VCA)
* Ringmodulator
* Noise Generator (pink/white)
* Sample & Hold
* Glide (Keyboard, S&H)
* Input für externe Signale
* 61 anschlagsdynamische Tasten
* 36 Motorpotis
* frei zuweisbare Wheels
* 100 Speicherplätze

http://www.vermona.de/htm/Mephisto%20-%20Features.htm

MIKMO DIY and Circuit Bending

Title link takes you there. Click on Synth DIY, followed by the links below for more, including how to make front panels and PCBs. Via GetLoFi.



"This is what the synth consists of so far :
* One +/- 12 V powersupply.
* Two VCO's.
* One Dual VCA.
* One ADSR envelope generator.
* One LFO.
* One state variable VCF.
* One sample and hold generator.
* One dual white / dual pink noise generator.
* One 1 in 4 out CV attenuator / distributor module.
* One 3 channel audio mixer.
* One dual ring modulator.
* One Steiner filter (almost finished, just need front panel).
* Two four position multi jacks, sharing frontpanel with the ringmodulators. "

Quasimidi Nucleus



Title link takes you to the source of the Nucleus shot below. I remember when the Nucleus buzz came out. People, including me, were drooling at the thought of this synth hitting the market. It was never released, and shortly after, the Polymorph was. It's still not clear whether the Nucleus was a Polymorph with keys, more, or something completely different. If you know, feel free to comment. In searching for more info I ran across SYNRISE's page on Quasimidi. It's worth checking out. They also list a QM-One and a Photon prototype Raven, along with the other Quasimidi synths.

Nucleus

Update via erminio in the comments back in 2006: "There's a Nucleus posted on ebay... the owner says there are only 3 pieces in the world. And it seems in good shape too!!! Hope it will serve you m8s"

However, via acemonvw in 2014 in the comments: "The Quasimidi Nucleus was planned as a Polymorph with more voices and a keyboard. What you see at that picture isn't a prototype - it's just the dummy. The Nucleus never reached the prototype level. The project was cancelled shortly after the musicmesse in Frankfurt, where the Nucleus was presented under glass. Does anyone remember the photon? Nearly the same story but a little bit earlier."

Polymorph

RCA Synthesizer MK II


via Analog Industries where you'll find a sample link.

Via 120 Years: "The RCA Synthesiser was invented by the electronic engineers Harry Olsen and Hebert Belar, employed at RCA's Princeton Laboratories, as a way of electronically generating popular music. Although it never fulfilled its inventors expectations it's novel features were an inspiration for a number of electronic composers during the 1950's."

Exotic Moog - New Flickr Shot

Shot by kevinfmason.



Exotic Moog by Martin Denny
Track Listing:
Cast Your Fate To The Wind
Let It Be Me
Quiet Village
I Talk To The Trees
The Enchanted Sea
Midnight Cowboy
Deulah
Let Go
Love Me Tonight
Was It Really Love
A Taste Of Honey
Yellow Bird

Synth DIY UK

"Synth-DIY UK 2006 is to be held on July 29th at Robinson College in Cambridge, the same great venue as we've used since 2003." Title link takes you there. Makes sure to click on the year links on the top right for the p*rn.

Jane Child's Fairlight Series III

Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. Some details saved below. Via Kevin Kelley of Audio Playground.



Includes:

Monitor
Keyboard
Fairlight Unit
CPU/Processor for Fairlight Unit
Stylus
Replacement Stylus & Stylus Pad
Optical Drive
Tape drive
SCSI CDRW Drive
32MB RAM
4GB Internal HD
3 Cables for Fairlight (as pictured below)
Custom fit Road Cases for EVERYTHING!!!!!!

2 User Manual Boxes that include the following:
•Reference Manual
•Tutorial Manual
•Fairlight Service Manual Binder (with blueprints)
•Command Summary
•CAPS - Midi Sequencer For Series III
•Cue List Timecode Sequencer For SoundFX
•Software Revision 5.4 Command Summary
•Series 111 STUDIO (Describes a lot of history behind the Fairlight)
•Rhythm Sequencer for Series III

Libraries:
Master Sampler Collection Rev 1.2 Strings
Prosonus Mono Library
Brass Reeds & Strings
Prosonus
EBN Sounds 2
Prosonus Disk Two
Fairlight EBN
Fairlight Sound Library
Fairlight Sound Library
MS Co Rev 1.2 Composite Strings & Drums/Percussion
Prosonus Disk One


Software Disquettes Include:

Electric Sound & Picture Revision Keydisk
Fairlight CMI Revision 9.34R Software SYS K2
Fairlight CMI Revision 9.34R Software USER K1
Fairlight CMI Revision 9.34R Software 0S9 K0
Fairlight Revision 8.30R Software SYS K2
Fairlight Revision 8.30R Software USER K1
Fairlight Revision 8.30R Software OS9 K0

Update via the comments: "Not that anyone cares, but I doubt that's Jane Child's Fairlight - the cases say M.S.P. (Maximum Sequential Potential) on them, which was Ned Liben's studio in NYC. Liben was "EBN" of the 80's synth duo EBN/OZN. Also, some of his sounds are listed as included with the auction."

Haven't Found The Perfect Sequencer?

Maybe this will help. A sweaty towel owned by none other than Keith Emerson! Wear it while you play for that extra perspiration, I mean inspiration, or take it to your local cloning lab and grow your own Keith Emerson. Details from the auction below (the seller sniffed it).



Via the auction:
"Keith Emerson's Towel
From Black Moon Tour
Here's a weird one. I was digging through my old boxes at my parents house and found my old concert t-shirts and this blue and white striped bath towel in a bag. It didn't take long for me to remember why I saved this towel in a ziplock bag - it was Keith Emerson's towel he used during the ELP concert I saw at Stanhope, NJ back in the summer of 1992.

My two brothers and I got to the show many hours early and I was lucky enough to get to stand against the wall in the front of the stage. I remember it being a very good show and that they played the classic song "Pirates". Keith used the towel the whole show to wipe his head and neck and threw in into the audience after the show was over. My entrepreneurial brother who was standing behind me actually caught the towel out of the air and then sold it to me for $15 on the ride home. (Nice brother, huh?)

After getting home, I placed the towel into a plastic ziplock bag and I NEVER washed it. (Pretty gross, I know) It has stayed in the bag ever since. It doesn't smell though- I sniffed it to check.

Well anyway, I'm not much of an ELP fan anymore, so I'm selling this piece of music memorabilia starting at the $15 price I paid for it 14 long years ago. You are welcome to use it as a bath towel, use it to cover your mini moog, hang it on your wall for inspiration, or somehow possibly extract Keith Emerson's DNA from it and make super keyboardist babies in the future! : )"

Frack Multis

Just liked this shot for some reason.



Title link takes you to some for sale by Steve Maietta.

Kawai K3m Schematics

Title link takes you to a 5M zip posted on AH by Plutoniq9. Note these are for the K3m, not the K3. Scan by Fredrik Zetterling.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Admin Note: Updating Flickr Posts

Update: I haven't seen any new posts in Bloglines, so maybe this won't be bad at all. I wonder if there is a point where updates just don't show up anymore. So if you don't see them, this might be why.

No title link. If you are subscribled to my RSS feed with any of the popular readers, you might notice a bunch of Flickr posts being updated. I'm going through each and updating them with "Shot by xxxxx" where xxxxx is the name of the author on Flickr. I just finished February and will work through the rest of the archives over time. Right now I need a little break. It's amazing how many synth shots have come in via Flickr since I started this blog. Anywho... Apologies for the noise - beleive me, this isn't much fun for me either. Just ignore them or enjoy them all over again. : ) I'm also commenting in Flickr to let people know I am posting and linking to their shots. If you are one of them, please know that this is not me attempting to spam you. I originally did not comment for that reason, but then realized I should be letting people know when I link to them and post one of their shots. I'd want to know.

miniMusic BeatPad driving a Voyager and 909

Update2: Moogulator put up a post on this. The funny thing is that I completely missed the irony in the shot - a mighty knob ladden Voyager being driven by a tiny pda. Too funny. Thanks Moogulator!

Update: I should note that everything in the samples is being triggered by BeatPad - I am not using the 909 sequencer. Also you can sync to BeatPad, so I could have the 909 running its own sequence, synced to BeatPad and have BeatPad sequencing another synth though the 909 via the 909 MIDI through.

I just posted about the miniMusic MixPad. That post actually came about when I was setting up this post. I was playing around with BeatPad driving a Minimoog Voyager and a Roland TR-909 and I thought I'd put up a couple of samples and a link to miniMusic. When I checked out their site I found the new software. That aside... Title link takes you to a couple of samples and shots. Note that these samples are a bit long, daft and don't fully showcase what BeatPad is capable of. I was just dinking around. BeatPad has a super intuitive UI. There is one page for your main lead and one for your drum machine (pictured above - click the shot to see the individual parts). You can mute and solo different sounds on the drum grid and you can mute either the entire lead or drum section. In the lead section you can mute notes, adjust the length of the pattern , gate time, velocity, transposition and tie notes all on the fly. It's a blast to tweak things live. There are four things I wish it had - support for driving multiple lead sequences driving different MIDI channels at the same time (basically multi-track live sequencing), the ability to sequence MIDI CC independent of notes for things like filter, resonance and other modulations, the ability to save sequences, and the ability to flip back to saved or "sanp-shot" sequences. To clarify when you edit one of the 64 sequences available, the edits remain when you close out, so in that sense they are saved, but once you edit one there is no way to go back. I beleive you are supposed to just use a new track, but when you have multiple tracks previosly saved it can be painful remembering each track. Hmm... Add a fifth item - the ability to name your sequences for saving. Regardless BeatPad is pretty amazing - there is just something super intuitive in using a stylus to control your sequences. Believe it or not, it beats the pants off of a bulky knob box. I'm still in disbelief that a Pocket PC MIDI device/cable for external sequencing has not yet hit the market.

What's up with that?

miniMusic MixPad and More

I previously posted about updates to MiniMusic's Beatpad. Well it looks like they have more software coming including MixPad, a full featured MIDI file player/recorder/editor. Title link takes you to the miniMusic site.



"MixPad is a full featured MIDI file player/recorder/editor. It will let you take any raw MIDI file with you on your Palm and play on any connected MIDI hardware. MixPad differs from any other Palm MIDI file applications with powerful graphic support for simple viewing and quick editing.

Ideal for real performance situations, MixPad uses the Palm hardware buttons for playback control, allows you to lock songs to prevent unintended changes, and gives you a powerful real-time mixer interface to control channel volumes, panning, and solos and mutes for every track during playback. The main display gives smooth scrolling of all MIDI data (including velocities and controller data in the lower window) and full zooming functionality. We are also building in a full range piano controller to play along with the current file or to add a new track to an existing file, and some slider controllers as well that can be assigned to any MIDI controller value (pitch bend, volume, vibrato, etc.).

We expect to release a Lite version of MixPad that works only as a player/viewer, and a full Pro version with complete recording and editing features enabled.
Available soon for $19.95 (Player) and $39.95 (Pro)"

Zebranalogic - Analog from Peru

Trip. Title link takes you to Zebranalogic, makers of effects, a modulator, oscillators, and a soon to be synthesizer. They are based out of Lima, Peru. I dig the clear cases. I hope they do this with the synth. If they do, I'll have to buy one for that reason alone. Samples on line. This one via the great GetLoFi.

Korg Delta - New Flickr Shots

New shots by cigplanet.

Nice Rack - New Flickr Shot

Shot by mikest.

Sekiden - New Flickr Set

Title link takes you to more. Roland SH-101 and Juno-60 in the set. Shot by "x is for people."

Animusic MIDImotion

Title link takes you to the Animusic website. They created proprietary software they call MIDImotion that "plays" 3D animation with MIDI sequences. Each instrument has a different 3D animation. When you play a piece of music, the animation plays in sync. Unfortunately at this point they have not released MIDImotion for others, but they are considering it. Check out the video samples online to get an idea of what it is.


"Animusic uses proprietary motion generation software called MIDImotionTM, to drive animation parameters within commercial packages." "But no matter what commercial software we use, the animation is always calculated procedurally with MIDImotion. This software is not currently available commercially, although it is likely that we will release a software product at some point in the future (many people have encouraged us to do so). Details will be posted here.

Without MIDImotion, animating instruments using traditional "keyframing" techniques would be prohibitively time-consuming and inaccurate. By combining motion generated by approximately 12 algorithms (each with 10 to 50 parameters), the instrument animation is automatically generated with sub-frame accuracy. If the music is changed, the animation is regenerated effortlessly.

Moogulator on MySpace

Title link takes you to Moogulator's MySpace site. Pretty cool. Moogulator runs a number of sites including Sequencer.de and the Machinesound.de blog amongst others. When I think of the top synth sites out there and especially in Germany, I think of Moogulator and Sequencer.de.

Klaus Schulze

Gorgeous shot of Klaus Schulze pulled from this Moogulator post. Title link takes you to a bigger shot.

Moog Modular Synth Manual

Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. Crazy that this is listed at 170 Euros.

ORLA Piano, Drawbar Accordian

More accordian madness. This one along with some other links sent my way via ben shannon illustrator. Title link takes you to ORLA.

Yamaha CS80

Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. Via Loscha.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Native Instruments Kore Video

Title link takes you to the video on Sonic State.

EML Synkey OVATION



via this auction. Details below.



"Rar, fancy: vintage EML Synkey vintage analog punch-card programmable synthesizer in recently adjusted; absolute top condition. It's the top rar: OVATION - version. Fully works and sounds incredible: The low-pass filter goes to high-pass filter and the band-pass in between and this is extremely effective. It has ringmodulator and some arpeggioator-like LFO-waveform varies due to the speed. It's unique and you can make some unpredictable polyphonic arpeggiations. Dealing with punch-card makes this machine very exotic! So maybe you bid on technically one of the best Synkey of the world! Pitty, it runs on American standard current 110 V , so there's a 220 V -adapter in need or comit me to do the modification for some extra (ca. 35-50EU depending on trafo)!"

"... these came out as early as in 1976, not 1978/79 as stated on most synth-sites out there. At least, this is what I was told by one of the founders/owners of the EML company - States Mikael. Thank you for the info! "

Update via the comments: "The Synkey service manual I have dates the individual drawings from about April 1974 to March 1975. 1976 therefore seems about right."

Santuarios

Thought I put up a post on this previously, but I can't find it, so here it goes. Title link takes you to Santuarios, a site with tons of gear p*rn of various studios.

Christian Wittman of Lightwave

Deathknöbbes

Hubba hubba. Waldorf Q on top of Alesis Andromeda. I found this one on this post about the PEK. You never know where you'll find some of these gems.

Update via Mr. Array in the comments:
"That's no Q+. Just a regular 16 voice Q, and a yellow one at that. I think the yellow was the best color by the way.

If you want to see a Q+, look over yonder:
studio_2005_small.jpg

There's an XTk 30 hidden somewhere in the pic too ; )"

matrix: I thought that was a reqular Q based on the logo, but the only color that made sense to me in the shot was red. Thanks for clarifying Mr. Array. It's updated.

Update2: And another shot form Mr. Array.

DX11 With Accordian Keys

Another synth modded with accordian style keys. Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction.

Roland MC4 b + MTR100

Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. The Roland MC4b is an old school sequencer with CV outs (pictured below). Note the MTR100 cassette interface for storing your sequences in the other shots. Via bleepsandbloops. BTW, according to the post, if you buy this for bleepsandbloops you'll get a boob flash.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Gnostic Rocket and The Springboard Dub

Title link takes you to Gnostic Rocket, a new blog on "Analog Synths, Circuit Bending, Music Production, Loop-Based Music and more. Brought to you by Gnostic Rocket, a Toronto-based experimental dub musician." Current post is on The Springboard Dub (pictured below) with samples. Interesting piece. I'm looking forward to seeing what else crops up. Check it out.



"This instrument is basically two cannibalized delay circuits, with bends added, built in a small piano-shaped cabinet (the unit is about 13" across, 18" high). There are springs in the cabinet where the piano keys would usually be."

Update via Doktor Future in the comments: "Hey , I listened to this guy (Gnostic Rocket) and this instrument at the Ambinet Ping in Toronto. Was pretty good. He backed it up with an electribe. It was a good set. He told me he paid a lot (can't remember exactly how much, somewhere between 2 and 4k CDN I believe) for that springie thing." Thanks Doktor.

The ANYSEQ

Title link takes you to a page on the ANYSEQ on sequencer.de. For those of us that do not speak German but speak English, here is a Google English translation. This appears to be a hardware sequencer by the folks of Anyware Instruments who brought us the SEMtex.

Moog Party Time - New Flickr Shot

Pikachu Possessed

Alright, this one would freak out my daughter. Via GetLoFi.

Roland SH-5 Modular - New Flickr Set

Title link takes you to more by unrest including Fenix and Serge modulars.

Willy D. Synth - New Flickr Shot

I think he has synth on his mind... Title link takes you to more.

Unisynth Electronic Guitar

No title link. Some shots I pulled from this post on Craigslist. More on the Unisynth Electronic guitar here.

Friday, February 24, 2006

Synth Buddha Says...

"Every human being is the LFO modulating his own health or disease."



I think mine is set to random. Title link takes you to more shots by The Genie Photos.

Dance Buddha Dance!

Ok, had to put up another. I just picture this little Buddha rocking out.



Make sure to read the captions when you get there.

Three Decades of Buchla

You are looking at three decades of Buchla in one gorgeous Buchla modular consisting of modules from the 100, 200 and new 200e series (who said you couldn't mix the 200e with older Buchla modules?). Title link takes you to a larger shot and one additional shot. Absolutly breathtaking. Note there is one non Buchla module in the system, a Milton Sequencer by Peter Grenader. Thanks Reed!

Update: Notes from Reed: "I decided it was time to put the greatest hits of all my Buchla systems into one easy-to-use configuration. It is basically all my personal favorites of the 100, 200 and 200e world, culled from systems that have come in & out of my hands over the past 12 years.

After I figured out the module configuration, I had the guy who did the metal ducting in my studio fabricate 7 "boats," in Buchla parlance, out of galvanized steel. Then my business partner Phil & I bought a router & some maple: plywood for the sides & solid pieces for the front. Learning how to use the router to cut curvy pieces of wood was fun. Phil did nearly all of the routing while I did nearly all of the sawdust-sweeping. We both did a lot of sawing. In the meantime, my long time technical guru Takeshi Kawana of Kawanatron built a beautiful power supply which weighs in at 46 pounds & sits separately from the maple cabinet. All 3 of us ran the various power wires & terminals throughout the boats, and I spent many nights installing the modules, replacing their power wires & terminals, and overcoming my 20-year fear of soldering.

I will not sell this. Most of the modules (except the 200e and some of the late-70's 200 stuff) have been an integral part of my music-making life for years, and ever since we first threw the power switch the instrument has been used every day in our television music business and almost every night after work when I stay & get wrapped up in the banana cords."

New Gear from EAR



"Electro-Acoustic Research is pleased to formally announce four
Livewire modules premiered at the Winter Namm show:

The Sub-Divider

A modern day re-issue of Nyle Steiner's classic Synthasystem
Frequency Divider. The Sub Divider is everything The S-P
Frequency Divider was...and a little more.

The Chaos Computer Series

The Chaos Computer, Random Gates and Analogue
Computation modules are the first three in a series of modular
analog computing functions which will be coming in the next few
months.

For details, images and descriptions of these and other Livewire
products, click on the link below and hit the Livewire tab for the
product summary menu.

http://www.ear-group.com/"

BamBam Studio

Title link takes you to BamBam Studio sent my way via Marc van den Hurk. Links to some gear p*rn below.

Mmmm... Hartmann


"A studio from om of the three Gearjunkies ;))))

http://www.bambamstudio.nl/plaatjes/studio/HighRes_photos/
I also have pics from my stydio in the 80/90ies:
http://www.bambamstudio.nl/plaatjes/studio/Jaren-80-studio/

more info on www.bambamstudio.com

Marc van den Hurk
music producer | sound engineer"

Full gear list on site.

The Honky Tonk Music Klone Dual Percussion Synthesizer


This one came up on AH with no info. If you know more about it, please share. Title link takes you to more shots [2/1/10: looks like the link is down].

Update 2/1/10: Some additional info via Alex: "The Klone Dual Percussion Synthesiser features -- as the name suggests -- two individual synthesis channels. Each channel comprises a VCO and noise generator, a multimode filter (HP, LP, BP, BS) which can self oscillate, and a simple D envelope (with variable polarity) for filter and pitch modulation. The envelope's decay time (which can be considered as release time) also affects the VCA. Channel 2 features also an LFO and the ability for FM -- which can produce some interesing results. Klone is either triggert by pads (e.g. Simmons Hugger Slave) or by a drum machine with separate (trigger) outputs.

I bought mine for 230€ (or was it DM?!) some years ago and it is in a rather poor optical condition, despite of that it's still fully operational." Click the KLONE link below for more.

Q R Ghazala's Tape Canvas

The brown stripes are tape. See the tape head at the end of that cable? Well you can pass it along all that tape in any direction you want. Interesting. Title link takes you to the post on GetLoFi. I'm digging GetLoFi's new looks as well - very sharp.

Stooge Industries

Title link takes you there. "Stooge Industries began by accident in 2000 when Dave Bradley decided to add modules to his Synthesis Technology MOTM synthesizer from different manufacturers, but with custom matching front panels. After a long period of trial and error, he found he was able to exactly match the original look of his system. Word got out and other folks wanted panels for their own systems. Six months later Dave and Larry Hendry joined forces. These "wise guys" shared a love for the Three Stooges, as well as synthesizers. Guessing correctly that there was a demand for synthesizer accessories, they became partners even though they had never met face to face."

Monosynth Lead War on HC

Remember the Mono Bass Synth Samples on HC? Well unfed started a Monosynth Lead War thread on HC. Feel free to submit your own or see what others are submitting. I'll post back when the results are in.

Update: Looks like there will be a Pad War as well. I'll put up a post on the results.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Larry Fast and Synergy

Title link takes you to the Larry Fast Synergy site. Scroll down and look for the album list on the left and/or bottom of the page for links to shots and interesting info behind each album.

Shot from The Metropolitan Suite - Note the Moog Modular 15

Dave The Packrat's Studio

David C. Lovelace, creator of The Packrat sent me the following shot of his studio. I asked if it would be ok to put it up on a post and he said sure. Nice studio. Title link takes you to a bigger shot. Thanks Dave.

PREVIOUS PAGE NEXT PAGE HOME


Patch n Tweak
Switched On Make Synthesizer Evolution Vintage Synthesizers Creating Sound Fundlementals of Synthesizer Programming Kraftwerk

© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH