Henfield wrote:The only problem for me is that the sound samples posted on Moog Space were with a synthesizer (Voyager or Korg) that were fed into the 107. It is hard for me to tell if any of the sounds were the 107 on its own or if the sound is a mix of the synth and 107 output. I would like to hear the 107 with electric guitar or bass, to see how the hard sync function works. It would be great if anyone would post a sound sample with the 107 into the 101 or the 107 into the Murf, as I play the bass guitar and I own both the 101 and the Bass Murf pedals. I am trying to decide on my next pedal purchase, between the 107 and the 102, please help me out if you can guys!
Point taken about the use of synths with the FreqBox. But since Cyril's NAMM demo was done with a guitar, Brian and I thought this was an opportunity to try it with a few synths and post some of the results for others to hear.
The synth sounds used were all relatively static. All of the modulations you hear in the clips are the result of tweaking the knobs on the 107. The sync function in the FreqBox can create sounds very similar to the Voyager's oscillator sync (similar to the synth sound in 'Let's Go' by the Cars), but the envelope follower and FM circuits can further transform the sound into hundreds of other timbres (fuzz, ring mod, intermodulation distortion, etc.). The audio clips only hint at what a synthesist can do with the FB.
Now that the FB is shipping, I'd expect others will soon post the guitar and bass samples you're looking for.
FreqBox or Ring Mod? Tough call if you're only going to buy one. IMO, the FB might be a better choice for a guitarist or bassist as it allows you to stay more in the sonic realm of a guitar effect (albeit a pretty extreme guitar effect). The Ring Mod seems better suited to synths in general (again, IMO), but both devices have their place in any musician's toolbox. It all depends on the sound you're going after.
- G