vocals through LP

Sorry if this has already been addressed,but is it possible to run vocals through LP? It seems that just connecting a microphone to audio in wouldn’t work,am I wrong?

You would need a preamp. Stand alone or an individual out from a mixer.

Correct, and even then, you’d only be able to process the vocals through the Patty’s filter and envelopes, not the VCO’s.

Either that, or you could yell really loudly in the mic… :smiling_imp: :mrgreen:

I have done this using an Audio Technica mic. The results were hilarious! Maybe I should make a video? :laughing:

Thank you all, looks like it’s back to the music store.
Incidentally,said store is an “official Moog dealer”,yet displays no such wares.Of course,I’m bias and maybe it’s not such a strange practice.
Oh yeah,I’d like to see that video mentioned!

Ok. I will post it up here next time I make a video. I’ve been holding out on making videos for too long. Break time’s over. :laughing:

Is it the store I’m thinking of ?

Al,the store sounds like “schlong & capade”,
I just can’t say the name,I’m too much of a wimp,but I’m sure you know who I’m talking about.I wish cowtown had better instrument type joints.

Hahahaha! :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

Schlong & Capade ! That’s really funny! It sounds more like a sex shop than a music store! :mrgreen: Of course you probably meant Long & McQuade, right ?

Correct! I couldn’t help but think"if this was my store,there would be Moogs for all to see."
They are just so beautiful on top of everything else.
I noticed Moog audio had an Old School for $1900.00 a while ago.That’s only $300.00 more than my LP [with cv mod],damn!

I’ve read that discrete circuitry [like inside MiniMoog],is more linear than IC.It sure looks a hell of alot better!

It’s also a pain to match those discrete transistors. Individual transistors in a chip rarely (if ever) fail. Usually a whole chip will fail. When one transistor in a chain fails, now you have to find a transistor that matches the others, assuming those haven’t changed their values. :open_mouth:

That Old School is their store demo. It’s the last one they have in stock.

But as for discrete transistors vs IC, that’s complete bull in my humble opinion. It might have been true in the 70’s but not anymore. Especially not with today’s fab foundries.
Electrons are microscopic energy particles. They don’t care if they go thru a big transistor of a microscopic one. We’re not talking high amperage here folks! As long as the chip has the same electrical characteristics in its transistors as their discrete counterparts, the results will be absolutely identical. It’s much more a question of different circuit design on the part of the engineer than what it’s being used to implement those circuits.

Of course component tolerances will play a role too. The fact that a Minimoog D sounds better than anything else is purely a question of circuit design, with flaws playing a major role. Even Bob Moog himself has stated that the early version of the oscillator board (all discrete components) was a partial failure. And people that say that this board sounds better than later ones is rubbish. That’s why as soon as they could, they came out with an improved version with a few ICs. And then a third and final one using even more ICs. The Voyager (and Old SChool) uses 98 % ICs and only a few transistors on its analog board.

The fact that the LP/SP don’t sound quite like a Voyager, is simply a question of circuit design and cost reductions. Both use mostly the same op-amps and CA3046, but in a different configuration. There’s a reason for their relatively low price, and it’s not all because their made in China.

That’s interesting,I do remember an interview with Dr. Bob and he said the later Mini’s were better.I hope one day to have a knob per function unit.Sorry.I’m babbling.

It’s so hard to get away from “made in China”,I was bummed when I read about some LP parts made there,I guess I was naive to think otherwise.It seems to taint a legacy or something.

I’d be willing to bet a lot of Moog parts are made in China. Capacitors, resistors, that sort of thing. Very few components are made in America anymore, and you will pay a huge premium for such parts.

Yep, it’s sad to see all those jobs going overseas. But who could live on a bowl of rice per day here?

I don’t know about the LP/SP, but on the Voyagers I know Moog uses high quality Alpha pots made in U.S.A.
Although some other internal components are made in Japan mostly. To my knowledge, the only internal parts made in China are the wire connectors and tie-wraps… :wink:

Not really related to music perse, nor does it have anything to do with the subject of this post, but this article came out just yesterday about the electronic industry in terms of manufacturing in America vs Asia… It was a good read.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/22/business/apple-america-and-a-squeezed-middle-class.html?pagewanted=all

The boards inside were designed in USA, but are produced and assembled in China from Chinese and Japanese made components. The instrument itself is later assembled, calibrated, tested, back in Asheville USA.
That’s the only way to get an affordable genuine Moog instrument such as the LP. Who could live on a bowl of rice a day here in North America ? If the Apple iPad was produced in USA, it would probably cost $2000 instead of $500. Suicide rates are also high in Chinese factories…but that’s another story.

What do you mean?
USA is overseas, China is not …
:wink: