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Archive for the ‘technofetish’ Category

Fender Rhodes Chroma

Sunday, May 15th, 2011

Looks AND sounds totally sci-fi. If this isn’t a colortastic synth experience, I don’t know what is.

Print money? feh, I synthesize money

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

More technically correct, I am selling another of my vintage synthesizers, the venerable Kawai K3M. Rackmount, digital/analog (DCO/VCF/VCA), 6 voice polyphonic, MIDI, and almost as old as my wife. You can make fairly fat sounds with it, not as much as a true analog synth but fair for what it is. What it isn’t, these days, is fitting in with my concept of a micro-studio (of course, the Juno-6 I just got on loan doesn’t fit in with that concept either, but fuck it man, JUNO-6!!!!). It does have monophonic mode so all 6 voices (2 OSC per) can sound at once, thus fattening for fatty fatness, but Moog it ain’t. Part of this problem lies in the oscillators, none of which seem to be very simple oscillators (sine, tri, PWM/square) though some are close, and if you have the patience (I don’t) there is actually an editable waveform that you could probably tune to your simple form of choice.

The programming is actually easy if you know what you’re doing with a synth, no knobs (sans the pitiful volume knob) for easy tweaking, but each parameter has its own button, so there’s no menu hunting, but there is a lot of button pushing because each value has to be incremented or decremented via… yup, pushbuttons (holding them does work for speed-crementation). Tweaking for happy accidents is unlikely (does happen, you just still kinda have to know what you’re doing).

But… rack mount! So awesome! And after all these years, everything on it works like a charm (probably even the memory cartridge but I can’t test it, lacking one) and it’s ball-out gorgeous on the inside, and dust-free as shit. Like, amazingly clean in there. I opened it up expecting a nightmare and got a museum piece of electronics work instead. Hoo-fucking-ray for no fans!

srs pristine.

Color Synthesis Update

Friday, April 1st, 2011

RMI Keyboard Computer

RMI Keyboard Computer

Perhaps the most 2010 like synth I’ve seen so far -- and that slot on the right? Takes a punch card. That’s right, a motherfucking PUNCH CARD.

Discovered via the lovely ladies of the Brooklyn Organ Synth Orchestra.

Synthetic Choices

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

In the long road to de-throning The Beast, which I probably should have done years ago when I lived in a studio apartment of which it was about 1/4th the size, I have pored and pored over choices for a replacement. Many years ago I purchased an Alesis Micron to be a travelling instrument, as it was tiny. Turns out it is tiny, but powerful -- it has the power of a full Ion and a few extras, just less knobs (I had assumed you’d get more of something practical out of it). I found this out as I was researching the Ion as potential replacement due to my appreciation of the timbres the Micron was capable of and wanting more -- turns out all you’d get is more knobs and slightly less functionality.

Of course, replacing a tiny keyboard with a larger, less functional version isn’t exactly moving forward so I ditched that idea immediately. However, it did tell me that I was definitely looking for a knobby, analog synth -- and not just an analog modelling synth like the Micron. It’s definitely got some kick to it, but you might as well go for the real deal. Oddly enough, if I had the money, I would totally buy a different Alesis keyboard -- they’re not really known for their synths, let alone analogs, but they produced one of the most bad-assed instruments of this century, the Andromeda A6. 16 voices of analog bliss and enough knobs to satisfy the perviest twiddler you could imagine. However, they are insanely expensive.

Then I thought about the Dave Smith Instruments Prophet ’08 (heir to the Sequential Circuits line of vintage Prophets). But that is also fairly expensive, though they can be had brand new still. So not right now. They are awesome though, tons of knobs and a sound that’ll make ya drool. 8 voices of polyphony

I thought about the DSI Tetra -- a tiny, 4 voice analog that’s basically half of a Prophet 08, minus the knobs so it’s harder to program unless you get a program to help access all those parameters. Enough knobs for twiddling around during a live performance, but… kinda expensive for such a small package and lack of keyboard/knobs. It would probably cost as much as a Prophet if it were fully sized though.

So I’ve settled on the Mopho keyboard edition. Basically a one voice Prophet 08, except it has per-voice sub-oscillators. Full complement of knobs for parameters (some accessible via shift button, but that keeps the cost down by multitasking knobs). If a Tetra were to be purchased in the future, I could polychain it for a 5 voice polyphonic synth (except it would lack sub-oscillators due to the Tetra not including them). This will keep costs down while giving me full access to knobs for tweakability. Except for the sub-oscillators, all programs transfer up to the Tetra and Prophet, so if they are purchased in the future…. It’s also a totally awesome screamin yellow. A perfect synthesizer for springtime!

If all goes according to plan, I should have it within a couple weeks. So hot!

HDR Microscropy available at Getty Images

Friday, January 28th, 2011

This robot scored big this time. Some of my HDR microscope images of integrated circuits are now available for licensing through Getty Images. Please enjoy your stay.