
The Samrat Yantra at Jantar Mantar, an 18th-century astronomical observatory in New Delhi, is perfectly juxtaposed against a modern building.


The Samrat Yantra at Jantar Mantar, an 18th-century astronomical observatory in New Delhi, is perfectly juxtaposed against a modern building.


Astro shows off a desktop filled with instruments, including a Roland TB-03 “boutique” bass line synth, a Polyend Play, a Meris LVX modular delay pedal, a Korg SQ-1 sequencer, and more.
Submitted by Negin Farahpour via Facebook.


A cat helping out in the studio with various signal-processing units, including Klark-Technik LA-2A clone, a vintage Alesis MIDIVerb III, a couple of units from A.R.T., and more.


The beautiful Dahlia returns once again, this time with a GR-1 granular synthesizer from Tasty Chips Electronics. From our friend Rob Robinson (orderofthestatictemple on Instagram).
The GR-1 is relatively new to me, but I do know that granular synthesis is in right now. Here is some more info from Tasty Chips’ website.
The GR-1 is massively polyphonic: It’s capable of 128 grains per voice, which can add up to a total of 1000+ grains simultaneously. Playing rich chords to create granular harmonic clouds is an easy task for the GR-1. Hook up your (USB or DIN) MIDI keyboards and you are ready to go.
The GR-1 is a sample-based device. Load in your own samples or feed live audio through it using a class-compliant interface and you are now ready to granulate all your source samples into countless variations. Anything is possible, ranging from subtle changes that still represent the original sample to a completely mangled and scattered manipulation of the original. Imagine what it would sound like if you hear thousands of little sound particles (grains) swarming around to reconstruct any sample you present it. Depending on what source sample you want to use, results can be lovely, soft, and soothing but also chaotic, aggressive and unpredictable and everything in between.


A stray cat looked after by regular reader Duncan Cook, “chillaxing on a boxed Roland Fantom 7 🎹😻”
We at CatSynth appreciate when folks take care of stray cats. After all, our own Big Merp was once such a stray.


The Open Hand Monument at the Capitol Complex in Chandigarh, India.
For more images from this amazing brutalist complex, as well as others from India, please check out our Instagram.

Ringer creates a soundscape with the Waldorf Blofeld. Submitted by our good friend Damien Olsen.
We also see a Line 6 delay pedal, Korg M50 and TR61 keyboard synthesizers, a Roland SP-404 SX sampler, and more.

This is the sweetest thing! The lovely Bella creates a drone on the Montage M7 while she relaxes. Her drone is a musical contribution to a larger composition and performance. From our friends I Love Cats and Synths on YouTube.