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Córas Iompair Éireann (Dundalk) Leyland Leopard / CIÉ MSL CS 80 (EZH 80) in Dundalk Garage, Louth 23rd August 1986.

Phillipe Zdar is one half of the excellent Cassius. Check out a song here (but I'd recommend some decent speakers) and see him on a Yamaha CS80 here.

 

This photograph was taken in unfavourable circumstances. Light was hugely unpredictable, changing moment by moment, as were his movements. In short, exposure, composition and focus were very difficult. While my view is perhaps biased by the fact that I was able to produce anything passable under those conditions, I like this a lot. His face is very classical and, lit in this way, Kenny said it reminded him of a Velasquez.

 

Glasgow, 2010.

Cs80 in Dundalk Garage. 23/06/86.

benges recording studio circa 2007

More colourful camera bags under construction :) Should all be finished tomorrow.

 

It does not always have to be professional black.

The two larger DOMKE bags are for my film cameras, one of the small ones for the LowePro Tahoe CS80 for my Panasonic Lumix DMC LX7, the other small one, still in the making is for my older daughter's birthday, though, she does not know this yet :)

 

And, my almost 30 year old BERNINA sewing machine is still working flawlessly! :)

 

The finished bags:

www.flickr.com/photos/30079014@N03/42258596044/in/photost...

Cs80 in Dundalk garage. 23/08/86.

Barclay James Harvest / Eyes of the Universe

Side one:

- "Love On The Line" - (Les Holroyd) - 4:45

- "Alright Down Get Boogie (Mu Ala Rusic)" (John Lees) - 3:53

- "The Song (They Love To Sing)" (Les Holroyd) - 6:15

- "Skin Flicks" (John Lees) - 6:54

Side two:

- "Sperratus" (John Lees) - 5:04

- "Rock'n'Roll Lady" (Les Holroyd) - 4:34

- "Capricorn" (John Lees) - 4:35

- "Play To The World" (Les Holroyd) - 7:02

John Lees, Les Holroyd, Mel Pritchard – All instruments and vocals, except for:

- Kevin McAlea – grand piano and Mini Moog on "The Song (They Love To Sing)"; Yamaha Cs80 synthesizer and C3 Hammond organ on "Sperratus"

- Alan Fawkes – saxophone on "Play To The World"

Recorded at Strawberry Studios, Stockport (July – September 1979)

sleeve design: Alwyn Clayden

Label: Polydor Records / 1979

ex Vinyl-Collection MTP

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyes_of_the_Universe

 

I stopped by JAM (a music equipment store in Stockholm) this week and wandered around in their analog synth section. I asked one in the staff if I could try this piece. No problem, except that the sound output was rather weak and panned to the left in the earphones.

 

The Prophet 5 was one of the first polyphonic, programmable synthesizers on the market (1978). As many analog synths, several revisions were built, all based on different circuits and, of course, audiophiles notice the differences between the revisions. Earlier ones sound fatter. Don't know if this is a rev2 or rev3 (as this was the first time I played on a Prophet 5) but it sounded fat as most equipment from this time. I might be able to tell rev2 and rev3 models apart when played isolated like this, but as usual these sonic differences between the revisions don't stand out in a full musical mix and then it doesn't really matter that much anymore.

 

Anyway, it can be heard on various songs from late 70's throughout the 80's such as Nena's "99 luftballoons" (the silkly smooth intro strings and the raw synth bass), Phil Collin's "In the air tonight" and the soundtrack for Halloween 1 and Halloween 2 from 1978 and 1981 respectively. I believe the musical record "War of the worlds" from 1978 narrated by Jeff Wayne included some Prophet 5 sounds too.

 

UPDATE:

 

"I did play it [the Thunderchild] on a few tracks on TWOTW, but none actually survived as Yamaha's CS80, the first poly synth, came out about half-way through TWOTW production, and we replaced many of the original sounds with Yamaha's ground-breaking keyboard, including the famous ribbon controller and finished most of the remaining sounds with it, although the Arp Odyssey, the mini Moog (great for bass sounds) and my Fairlight contributed a bit."

 

[From Retro Synths Ads]

 

Listen to the Prophet 5 here.

I've been after this one for a while; it's been a regular sight round town this summer and I've deleted several blurred and distant shots of it.

8,200 miles at the last MOT and it's regularly been doing a few hundred miles each year since its first recorded test in 2009.

NSW Rail Transport Museum Wollongong & Moss Vale Tour, 5/9/1987.

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The main man in baby form. (look at the lenght of his digits!)

 

Yamaha CS80 Buttons

 

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

$495.00

Apple Macbook /wLogicPro9,Protools9,StudioOneV2,WavesMercury,Bestplugs

 

Hi. I have a black MacBook for sale. The hard drive has been upgraded to a larger one. The ram has been upgraded as well. I currently use this computer at a recording studio. This computer is fast. The last project I did was well over 90 tracks and it handled it without a problem. I have the project and can open it up and run it so that you can see how it handles it. Not a glitch.

 

This is the cleanest one on craigslist. Not a crack, not as scratch. The best part is you do not have to be confined to a studio. Work anywhere. Hurry!!! This computer will not last long at this price.

 

I need to sell it immediately to take care of some things. For more information you can contact me at 678-851-6253.

 

Protools 9 HD - (works with any interface)

Logic Studio 9

Final Cut Pro

Presonus Studio One V2

Microsoft Office 2011

Adobe CS4 (Photoshop, Dream Weaver, Flash, Illustrator etc)

iLife 11

Iwork 09

Aperture

Pro Presenter

Toast Titanium

 

Plugins for Protools 9, Personus Studio One V2 and Logic pro 9

 

1. Abbey Roads Mastering Pack

2. Abbey Roads Brilliant Pack

3. Anteres Auto Tune Evo

4. Waves Mercury Bundle (on sale now for $6330) - That's Every Waves Plug in ever made including the newest ones!!!!!

5. Flux-- All of them!!!!

6. T-Racks 3

7. Slate Digital FG-X

8. Soft Tube Plugins!!! Yes!!! All of them

9. Sony/Sonnox Plugins... All of them including the famous award winning Sony Oxford EQ

10. Sound Toys Plugins... All of them

11. SPL -- All of them

12. Vocalign Pro

13. URS Strip Pro

 

+ Many More

  

Audio Instruments

 

1. Native Instruments Komplete 5

2. Rob Papen.. Albino, Blue, Predator

3. Spectrasonics Trillian

4. Timewarp 2600

5. Lennar Digital Sylenth 1 (Amazing Synth)

6. Garritan Steinway

7. Motu BPM

8. FXspansion BFD2 ( I can also arrange to get you Evil Drums) Just google it!!!!

9 FXPANSION GURU

10. Applied Acoustic Systems (Lounge Lizard etc)

12. Arturia CS80

 

And so many more.

Also in photo, Korg Poly Ensemble, ARP Pro-soloist, Farfisa Syntorchestra, Clavinet D6 and Fender Rhodes 88

Yamaha CS80 and Korg Delta

 

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The top 3 are Studio Electronics SE1X NE custom color panel for us, ATC Xi Quad custom for Nova, and a Code 80D designed by Nova and Studio Electronics - our version of the SE Omega. We took out Omegas Arpeggiator and put in filter control, which you can control any of the filters including Moogs, SEM, Arp 2600, CS80, or TV303. It can also come with discreet op-amps.

Moog Multimoog, Roland SA 09 and a Yamaha CS80, some 50 degrees or so declined.

Inside a Waldorf Wave.Had to open it to replace the battery.It's not so easy to open a Wave as it has a few small screws wich can only be reached with a very small screwdriver.

View on the front from the Waldorf Wave with the panel set in maximum position.

View on the leftside from a Waldorf Wave with the struts in maximum position.

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

View on the hydraulic pump or strut underneath the frontpanel of a Waldorf Wave.These were broken and had to be replaced.They only have 2 positions:complete out,or complete down.The brand is Stabilus and has various lenghts and strenghts,as they also manufacture these struts for cars.

View on the hydraulic pump or strut underneath the frontpanel of a Waldorf Wave.These were broken and had to be replaced.They only have 2 positions:complete out,or complete down.The brand is Stabilus and has various lenghts and strenghts,as they also manufacture these struts for cars.

Connections on the backside of a Waldorf Wave.Here you see 4 inputs,pedal inputs,and the midi-ports.

This is the inside of my Yamaha CS-80 when I last had it open for tuning. This is one of the first polyphonic synthesizers from the mid 70s, weighing over 200 lbs.

Was the DX1 the last of the GX-FX Yamaha grand showcase? Maybe the DX1 was a replacement for the CS80 as it is not a three tier organ style as the GX/FX.

 

I would love to see the 'X' again sometime.

During 1984 and 1985 everyone was unloading their analogue gear to buy Yamaha DX-7's and EMU Emulators. Digital was in. Deals were to be found every week. So I bought two because I needed (of course) one CS-80 for my left hand (bass) and one for my right hand. Great synths.

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

View on the front from the Waldorf Wave with the panel down.

View on the rightside from a Waldorf Wave with the struts in maximum position.

Connections on the backside of a Waldorf Wave.Here you see the outputs.

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

The photographs should be shared only with permission, and in the form they have been uploaded here, with no cropping or further editing, and the watermark must remain in place. Copyright on all these images remains with the photographer, Neil Fellowes

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