First I would like to say hello to all Moog fans.
I have one question: Do you have some experience using MF-108M for classical chorus synth sounds (for example like Roland Juno 60 or Elka Synthex strings sounds)?
Thanks
First I would like to say hello to all Moog fans.
I have one question: Do you have some experience using MF-108M for classical chorus synth sounds (for example like Roland Juno 60 or Elka Synthex strings sounds)?
Thanks
I had a MIDI retro fit Juno 60 and although I really liked the Chorus on the Juno, I much prefer the sound of the MF-108M. It is also far more programmable, range of sounds is a lot bigger, it is a brilliant sounding flanger, you can sync/automate everything on it and it is also far less noisy.
The MF-108M also cost me as much as the Juno did!
One thing to consider tho, is that the MF-108 provides a stereo output by effectively inverting the phase of the wet signal on the other output. This makes for an extremely wide stereo image but play it through a mono system and the wet effect, practically disappears. Mono P.A.s are very rare these days, but not internet radio stations…The way to work around this is to record whatever patch you want through it, twice and pan the parts left/right, old school way.
I’m loving mine, especially on percussion, drones, leads…anything really.
Regards,
Nectarios.
The classic string machine ensemble generators used 2/3/4 delay lines and dual LFOs at different frequencies and phase offsets.
The MF108M has only a single LFO and delay line, so it isn’t an ensemble generator.