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This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 11:00 pm
by thealien666

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 11:41 pm
by filtered
nice! what were your waveforms on the mini?

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Thu Apr 05, 2012 11:53 pm
by thealien666
filtered wrote:nice! what were your waveforms on the mini?
Thanks. I had only one oscillator going, with the "wide rectangular" wave (second square wave). Careful, and slight, control of the pitch bend wheel allowed for detuning effect with the delay.
Sometimes, less is more appropriate...

I don't know exactly what John Paul Jones used for his studio performance. Though I'm sure it wasn't a minimoog. Maybe a Steiner-Parker Synthacon ? Anyone knows for sure ?

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 4:13 am
by fyvewytches
wwwoooOOOOAAAaaaawww, nice sound !!!! .....

I bet this thread is going to turn into a D vs V match :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 9:16 am
by filtered
I bet this thread is going to turn into a D vs V match
don't you dare! :lol: The Voyager makes sweet rectangles too, FYI!
How about let's turn it into a "I need to buy a Poly synth to play underneath my Voyager" thread? Your Korg does a nice job there alien- My MS2000 has 2 broken keys and a dead screen- It's time for me to...invest! The question is, which one? Hmmmm... Prophet 08? I'm not tech saavy enough or rich enough for a P 5... What else is out there as a good layerizing workhorse?

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 9:40 am
by thealien666
Thanks.

If you're looking to spend little money and get a lot, and don't mind using virtual analog, there's the Roland JP8000 or Alesis Ion.

If you'd prefer to stick to analog (or hybrid), there's the Roland JX3P, or Korg DW8000 (very nice integrated programmable stereo delay).

If you're willing to spend a good amount of money, and still stay analog, then there are those:Moog Memorymoog, SC Prophet 5, Oberheim OBX, Yamaha CS80.

TIFWIW

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 9:54 am
by EricK
Looks like we were both busy yesterday heh.

Nice video!

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 10:23 am
by filtered
If you're willing to spend a good amount of money, and still stay analog, then there are those:Moog Memorymoog, SC Prophet 5, Oberheim OBX, Yamaha CS80.
hmmm, I think the most practical choice would be the CS80 then... :lol:
of course I'd have to hire a tech roadie to assist in gig transport and the subsequent retuning... "looking for synth tech roadie NC area- must look like he/she's in a band, without trying to look like he/she's in a band- cant be under 20 or over 50..."

haha- your DW8000 sounds nice, but I get nervous menu-diving- anyone used the Roland JP8000 on here? say vs the MS2000? that zipper sound on the filter kills me (in a bad way)
if clubs around here paid more I could justify a bigger purchase, but I just use the Voyager live anyway...

and by the way, that mini sure looks minty- nice restoration job!!

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 10:27 am
by Rob Smith
:D Excellent my friend, One of my favorite Led Zep songs.

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 10:42 am
by Spartan X
Very nice and very true to the original. I've read that John Paul Jones used a VCS3 for that intro.

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 10:46 am
by thealien666
@filtered

If you're looking to combine polyphonic synth with live tweaking of it, and you don't like zipper artifacts, then you can set aside almost all the virtual analogs (except the Alesis Ion which has 8192 values for each knobs).

Some early hybrids also suffer from lack of parameter resolution, like the DW8000, JX3P, JX8P, ESQ1,

Even some expensive beasts do suffer from this, to an extent: the SC P5, and probably a few others too.
Computer technology was quite limited in those days...

But generally, in my humble opinion, a polyphonic synth will tend to be used as a backing for a mono synth by playing chords, and will less likely to be tweaked in real time than an analog mono synth. That's not to say that you can't produce the occasional "wah" effect on some chords though by twisting that cutoff knob...

If I had the money, I'd love to get my hands on an Alesis Andromeda. 16 voices of pure analog sound, combined with extreme knob resolution, and straightforward single layer menu system. Next best thing to a memorymoog. It doesn't look very good, but it would be in the shadow of my Mini anyway... :wink:

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 10:47 am
by Rob Smith
I believe you are correct Mr. Spartan. http://www.reocities.com/jpjkeys/emsvcs3.html
:D

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 11:02 am
by thealien666
Thanks for the kind words guys, and that link Rob ! :D

I knew I had read that somewhere before... So the note relating to that on the Steiner-Parker Synthacon page on Vintage Synth Explorer is wrong. I thought so...

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 3:40 pm
by stiiiiiiive
Nice vid Alien! Pristine recording, suggests landscapes... cool :)

About a polyphonic synth... funny because I'm looking for one to learn synthesis a friend of mine. I'm quite surprised nobody introduced the Nords or Virus (A or B, keep this moderately old school) in the blooming debate.

Is there any reason I, young Padawan, still ignore?

Re: This is what I did with my Minimoog today...

Posted: Sat Apr 07, 2012 12:14 am
by filtered
is the Opus 3 not a contender in the polyphony discussion? just curious, since it never seems to be brought up when discussing polyphonic Moogs...