sonoio2 from Alessandro Cortini on Vimeo, via matrixsynth:
sonoio2 from Alessandro Cortini on Vimeo.
sonoio2 from Alessandro Cortini on Vimeo, via matrixsynth:
sonoio2 from Alessandro Cortini on Vimeo.
From FOCtv on YouTube:
“auto-un-installation of girl-cat module”
Among the cutest cat-and-synth videos I have seen so far 🙂
Can anyone identify the any of the modules?
(UPDATE: thanks to prophei for identifying the synthesizers.com modules)
UPDATE: we actually featured Francesca back in 2007.
From oliverchesler on flickr:

In addition to Zoe the cat, there is a Voice of Saturn, Korg KR-55 and Boss DR-110 rhythm machines, a Roland SH3 and a Yamaha CS5, among others.
Oliver Chesler is also the author of the blog wire to the ear which we at CatSynth follow.
Today is Luna’s fifth birthday.

Thanks to everyone who has already wished her a happy birthday. And I think it was quite appropriate for CatSynth that an art/music review was the vessel by which some of those wishes were received. We will actually celebrate tomorrow, when both of us will be back home.
No, this is not Luna. It’s a video from YouTube by cyriak, as seen on matrixsynth:
Sorry… meow mix
“my cat wrote the song, I just played the music and shot the video”

A follow-up of sorts to Weekend Cat Blogging. Luna paused in front of this rack and of course I had to grab the nearest camera and snap a picture of her posing.
If Luna represents the present, the gear represents the past. The Yamaha TX81Z has a long personal history, but the other E-MU and Yamaha modules are just there, filling up space. I can remember when these were coveted items and each came with a large price tag. But they do make a nice backdrop for a “CatSynth pic.”