
Chuck is back! And this time he has an Arturia KeyStep, Roland MC-101, Modal Electronics Skulpt, and Elektron Model:Samples. From Morgan Webster via our Facebook page.
Chuck is back! And this time he has an Arturia KeyStep, Roland MC-101, Modal Electronics Skulpt, and Elektron Model:Samples. From Morgan Webster via our Facebook page.
Musician Colleen (Cécile Schott) plays a beautiful live set on two Moog Granthmoders, several MoogerFooger pedals. Her cat Sol is sleeping blissfully atop a vintage Roland Space Echo (RE-201). Watch all the way to the end 😺
From the Instagram post of the same video:
Today you can listen to the suite of 3 movements that closes the album, “Night looping”, a homage to insomnia, to laying in bed at night and thinking in loops about the best and the worst that could happen to you, or that may already have happened to you… Available on all platforms.
https://www.instagram.com/p/Cw2zdvwtxCd/
I hope you will enjoy this video of “Movement II”, which I shot in the sleepy presence of my beloved Sol one week ago. Technical explanations are in the subtitles of the video, and as usual, I’ll be happy to reply to any question you may have! As with the whole album, this song uses only one synth, the @moogsynthesizers Grandmother, and one delay, in this case the Moogerfooger MF-104M. Nothing else, and no digital production involved.
You can find more of Colleen’s music at colleencolleen.bandcamp.com
It’s always fun to check in with our friend Kamal Sabran as he jams in his unique studio with his cats. We see a Behringer Neutron, a Roland SP-404SX, a vintage Ace Tone Rhythm Fever, an analog oscilloscope, and reel-to-reel. I’m definitely curious about what the reel-to-reel tape is contributing to the music in this jam.
Bread is curled up on the Teenage Engineering OP-1. We saw Bread’s sibling Kielbasa (aka “Not Tuna”) with the same OP-1 recently.
From thedigtalpurrgatory on Instagram.
Bread snuggled up between me and the OP-1. Good morning, Bread.
Sidney Crosby does what cats do best and has jumped up on the platform with numerous pedals and mini-synths belonging Scott Smigiel.
Submitted by bittersweetdb on Mastodon.
Here’s Sidney Crosby on @ssmigiel’s live setup of many pedals and mini synths.
https://mstdn.social/@bittersweetdb@mastodon.social/110996206662452109
Big Merp loves attention and always wants to be where the action is. So it’s fairly common to find him on this spot between the MacBook Pro and the Modular system. And in this instance, he struck a particularly handsome pose 😻. You can see quite a few of our Eurorack modules, including our prized Metasonix yellow and silver tube modules in the upper left corner of the case, as well as many others that have appeared in our recordings and videos over the years. A full list of brands is in the tags.
This is also where we shoot a lot of our hardware demo videos, so it often ends up cluttered. But we always make sure there is space because you never know when Merp is going to jump up and say hi.
Lou basks in the sun above a vintage Yamaha CS-15 synthesis. From synthguy216 on Instagram.
That’s what a sunny afternoon is for. Lou recharging next to my CS-15
https://www.instagram.com/p/CdEQoKeOBGb/
The CS-15 is not one I know much about, compared to some of the others in Yamaha’s famous CS series. A bit from Vintage Synth Explorer:
This synth really has its own sound. The CS-15’s got style. Built like a tank with a lot of nice knobs and best of all, not one but two of those funny sounding multimode filters…The best things about it are the flexibility of the VCFs and the routings to the filters and envelopes. You can rout VCO 1 to both VCFs and the VCFs to any of the envelopes positive or negative voltage. The VCFs are 12 dB/Oct and are switchable between low, band or high-pass. They are the key to the nice sound of the Yamaha CS family. Other nice features are noise, external-in for processing other sounds, LFO with Sample & Hold for those bubbling sounds and an individual auto-bend for the VCOs.
https://www.vintagesynth.com/yamaha/cs15.php
Kielbasa – also known as “Not Tuna” in a previous video – is jamming on the Teenage Engineer OP-1. I like the combination of chords, pads, and more percussive bell-like tones.
Submitted by our friend Antoine Macrroncles at thedigitalpurrgatory on Instagram.
Tenaya is a cat that lives with @squarepulsemusic – we see her exploring the studio now, which features multiple Korg synths, Sequential, Arturia, and more.