View allAll Photos Tagged modularsynth
these shots are taken from a video synth jam with my new video acquaintance Rich
they were made when we met up and hooked up our video gear for the first time loads of fun! ;)
his blog is here
and mine is here
Michael Bailey, 2014
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these shots are taken from a video synth jam with my new video acquaintance Rich
they were made when we met up and hooked up our video gear for the first time loads of fun! ;)
his blog is here
and mine is here
ARP 2500 and ARP 2600.Both have their matching keyboard.The ARP 2600 is the last version,black/orange faced.The ARP 2500 is made in 1970 and has serial#70-009 and has a complete wooden cabinet.Systems built from 1972 untill 1978(serial#21 to ???)have metal casings and 20 positions in the upper matrix..
This circuit uses the Arduino to translate MIDI messages into Note CV and Velocity CV which are then sent to a modular synth. The circuit also has a clock divider, clock divider potentiometer, and gate output which are not hooked up in the photo. I went with the minimum needed to test the circuit out for now.
More information can be found at the Arduino Synth Yahoo Group.
Pictured is my attempt at breadboarding the Greg Surges Octomod. The Octomod is an Open Sound Control to Control Voltage (OSC to CV) interface. This interface provides connections between hardware modular synths and software such as Processing or Pure Data. I'm still testing my breadboard out along with the software connections but I'm super excited to try it out for the first time.
Ongoing discussions about the device can be found on the following forums:
Pictured is my attempt at breadboarding the Greg Surges Octomod. The Octomod is an Open Sound Control to Control Voltage (OSC to CV) interface. This interface provides connections between hardware modular synths and software such as Processing or Pure Data. I'm still testing my breadboard out along with the software connections but I'm super excited to try it out for the first time.
Ongoing discussions about the device can be found on the following forums:
The third Toppobrillo Quantimator prototype was brought to life today. Between Bret, Josh, and myself we should be able to narrow down all of the bugs fairly fast. Let the bug squashing begin! Now the hardest part is going to be resisting the urge to write music. The Quantimator is really musical as soon as it is plugged into a patch and naturally it wants to be used in that context. It makes me want to play with it and not test for firmware issues. Hmm, I guess making some demos would be a way of working while playing.
So anyhow the image above is an arpeggio patch using the Quantimator with a Fonitronik Sequential Switch. The switch cycles between three notes which are output to an oscillator's pitch input. Modulating the chord selection with a control voltage adds a slight variation to the arpeggio.