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The acid stylophone gives up the cv/gate secrets

Courtesy of Paul in the comments for my way-too overexcited Gakken SX-150 unboxing post, who just emailed the genius behind all those YouTube videos featuring stunning looking home-made analogue sequencers somehow jacked in to the SX-150, and asked him how he did it - comes this photo which details where to poke your soldering iron to get cv/gate inputs. Thanks to Paul and denha.

Filed under  //   gakken   hack   synth  
Posted December 10, 2008
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Droids in Poladroids

Mainly 'cos I can't resist fiddling with Poladroid a bit more, here's some gratuitous Tomy robot vs. analogue synth gear porn below, some photos I took for a mixtape cover last year. Interesting how blue the robots-with-patch-cable-dreads looks in comparison to the green-y one, wonder if that's the randomness of Poladroid kicking in. 


Actually the random element is the key to the addictive nature of the program. You could work out a macro in Fireworks, Photoshop or GIMP, but it'll pretty much give you similar results each time. I really like that there is no control over the effect settings in Poladroid; there's no way of setting the crop or the green vs. blue balance, you just get what you're given. One of the photos in the previous set I posted, Lee sat behind a set of silver drums, turned out massively better than the original, which I'd previously dismissed as being a bland nothing sort-of shot - the crop and the subtle brown sheen really lifted it.





     

Click here to download:
Droids_in_Poladroids_tag_polad.zip (408 KB)

Filed under  //   poladroid   random   robot   synth  
Posted October 27, 2008
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Coldcut does the Radiophonic Workshop

Matrixsynth has the scoop on a load of photos of Coldcut working on a live mix of BBC Radiophonic Workshop stuff for the Electric Proms. Look at that lovely EMS Synthi A. Mmmm. But what no massive tape loops, then?

Apparently it'll be on Annie Nightingale's show, possibly next Saturday at 5am?

Filed under  //   ems   radiophonicworkshop   synth  
Posted October 18, 2008
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2008 VEMIA auction of old analogue synths and effects

The VEMIA auction website is maddening, but there's lots of lovely old stuff on sale, including a lovely looking and rare-as-a-solvent-bank PPG 1002 monosynth, a bunch of old Korg stuff including an MS50 expander (starting at the eye-watering price of £950), the useful MS-02, and this spruce SQ-10. 

The auction ends on the 8th November.

Filed under  //   synth  
Posted October 2, 2008
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Gakken mini-synths arrive from Japan: I r way too excited

Quite rubbish sort of day at work, have to drive home with shopping, boooring, walk in through the door and...

...there's a parcel from Amazon Japan arrived. COME ON.

Western analogue synth types have been going mad for an edition of a Japanese science magazine called Otona No Kagaku, because its latest issue comes with an analogue synth, for about £15.

Yes, can you hear this Roland and Korg - an analogue synth. Didn't you say something about it not being economic to make these things anymore? What?

So bring on the traditional unboxing porn.

With postage it came to about £50 delivered for the two - ordered early on in August and finally posted late last week.

Mmmm, Buchla. The magazine is great, wish there had been a international edition. Didn't realise the GX-1 came with its own chair. Oh, where's that synth thing?

So comes as a kit, although there's not much work to do, just some screws and knobs to attach. You'd half expect Rolf Harris to be on the front of this - it looks inspired by the Stylophone. Here's the circuit board.

When I first put the thing together, I didn't screw the terminals for the carbon strip down enough, so I was only getting one high pitch out of it. Make sure they're tight, and it's all ok.

'Scuse the dusty mixer. The speaker is really tinny but bloody loud (just like the Stylophone...) on the hi setting - best go through an amp and some decent speakers to really hear the thing.

It's a single saw tooth oscillator only, with a square or triangle LFO which gets quite fast, possibly into audio ranges, but you can't alter the depth of the effect. The attack and decay knobs seem to be attached to the pitch and VCF. You can get quite blippy with the decay set short and the cutoff set low-ish.

By all accounts the filter is based on the Korg 35 in one of the versions of the MS20, and it sounds pretty good, but the resonance is either on or off, which is a bit of a shame. It's not easy to play a tune on the thing - the Stylophone had individual pads for you to scrape the stylus on, the SX-150 has a continuous ribbon which makes it easy to do lots of swoops and glides, but hitting definite notes is really tricky.

I had a quick fiddle with the "ext source" input, hoping that it would track one of my synths keyboards in a linear fashion, but unfortunately not - once I'd jacked up the level into it enough for it to trigger, it jumped multiples of tones between keys.

Here's some of my fiddling, bunged through an old analogue echo for extra hiss and nastiness.

(download)

There's been some thoughts about mods already for the thing, with most of the interest and resources being in Japanese so far. Masa921 has some mods - I've got to have a go at the "VCF resonance atrocities" fix, it sounds great - check the MP3 demo. Also the SQ-150 sequencer project looks like a great add-on - maybe Otona No Kagaku could run that in their next issue? Don't make me get the soldering iron out, I'll only damage myself. Here's a mildly hypnotic demo of the SQ-150 on Youtube.

There's also a MIDI interface project floating around, but I'd rather keep it triggered off cv/gate if possible. Gan, the designer of the SX-150 mentions that the stylus acts as cv and gate, so there must be a way through there.

Filed under  //   gakken   synth   video  
Posted September 17, 2008
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Dave Smith's Mopho

Um. I'm glad he's still making these things but it's, well - it looks godawful. I'd have to play the bleeder blindfolded. In the dark. 

Assuming that this is the real thing of course, this has - ahem - slipped out somehow and found its way to Analogue Heaven. Oh, marketing.

AH report that it's all analogue up the wazoo, a couple of oscillators, a Curtis LPF, three envs, dunno how many LFOs, and a 16 step sequencer, which sounds rather lovely. I'm all for sequencers on synths, my Pro-One and SH-101 get plenty of abuse because of their simple digital sequencers.

Filed under  //   davesmith   mopho   synth  
Posted September 12, 2008
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Moog power - synth 60s/70s album covers


Lots more (and the records for a cheeky download) over at 36-15 Moog.


   

Click here to download:
Moog_power_-_synth_60s70s_albu.zip (576 KB)

Filed under  //   download   mp3   music   synth   vinyl  
Posted August 31, 2008
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Paklsound vs. MS20

Someone had to do it - here's a rubbish video of Paklsound shoved through the External Sound Processor of my lovely old (but humming worryingly) Korg MS20. Um, let's see if Posterous can handle video, then.

Get the Flash Playerto see this player.
(download)

One of the functions of the External Sound Processor on the MS20 (the section bottom right of the patch panel) is that it can convert sound to voltage, detecting both pitch and a trigger level for turning the synth notes on and off. Hoohah.

Just to explain that bit in plain English: so Paklsound on my 2007-vintage iPod Touch is controlling the 1978-vintage MS20 synth. Hooray for technology, especially the old stuff.

This is a bit rubbish right now, but hey ho, it's a start.

Filed under  //   ipodtouch   paklsound   synth  
Posted August 21, 2008
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Super spooky Polivoks in the kitchen

Could be straight off "The Dignity of Labour" or "Reproduction", I love it... (via MatrixSynth)

Filed under  //   synth   video   youtube  
Posted July 31, 2008
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