Miniwave
Harry Bissell
harrybissell at prodigy.net
Sun Sep 10 21:13:25 CEST 2000
Aw Sh!t.
Now I have an "ultra rare" model. I'll feel "ultra extra guilty" when I chop it
up.
Now you will have to issue "certificates of authenticity" to those "early
adopters"...
Oh boy this will look really cool in liner notes. And in 20 years the newbies
will
still debate whether the "hand silkscreened" units "sounded better".
Can you say "TubeScreamer" ???
H^) harry (lol)
Grant Richter wrote:
> Hello All,
>
> Thank you for the testimonials!
>
> John Simonton has kindly assigned Wiard the 976x model numbers for our
> modules. I am hoping to make the future runs (with Johns permission) look
> like "official" 9700 series modules. He is still debating the pros and cons
> of having "guest" designers, and whether having our modules look like his is
> a good idea or bad.
>
> If John approves it, we'll do a larger run of faceplates with the official
> look. The hand built, hand silkscreened limited edition modules will just go
> down in the history books as "ultra-rare collectors items". I had envisioned
> the modules as expanders for the 9700 series but also good for Arp, MOTM,
> Blacet and Wiard 300s. We are all waiting for the PAIA VCO of course which
> is key to the whole thing.
>
> The Joy Riders ARE the "Dual Borgs", we just added a joystick for control
> instead of two rotary pots. Darwin Grosse came up with the name "Joy Rider"
> and I thought it was so cool I renamed the Borg. It is still the Borg
> "Assimilator" PCB as used in the 300 series. We currently have six left,
> but there will be more in the future.
>
> I just want to add that I have purchased modules from John Blacet and Paul
> Schrieber. The Blacet "Mixer Processor" is the most heavily used module in
> my current setup, and I constantly use Paul's patch panel to connect all
> these different items together. The question of "Who is better" is quite
> ridiculous. I can personally attest to the quality and well thought out
> nature of all these module products.
>
> It really boils down to the kind of decision you make if you chose to play
> violin or piano. There is nothing inherently superior in either and it is
> strictly a matter of personal taste. The only thing better than either is to
> hear them both together! And so it is with synthesizer modules. A VCO is
> fun, a VCO with a Mini-Wave is more fun, a VCO with a Mini-Wave and a
> Klangwerk is even more fun yet.
>
> So shop early and shop often (from all your module suppliers).
>
> Best,
>
> Grant
>
> ----------
> >From: Mitchell Hudson <mitch at sirius.com>
> >To: EFM Synth DIY <efm at xavax.com>, Synth DIY <synth-diy at node12b53.a2000.nl>
> >Subject: Miniwave
> >Date: Sun, Sep 10, 2000, 2:17 AM
> >
>
> > I just got a pair of mini waves last week and am very impressed! This
> > is an excellent module with lots of possibilities. Works really well as a
> > quantiser. The wave shaper is very nice with plenty of waves to work with.
> > Another use I hadn't thought of was to the miniwave as a sequencer.
> >
> > It took a couple of tries to figure the thing out, of course everything
> > started working as soon as read the instructions, go figure. The wave
> > shaper only seems to work with a saw? Which makes sense but I am curious
> > why I can't get much more than a screech with a triangle? The envelope knob
> > is still some what of a mystery to me still?
> >
> > A question to Grant : are you still planning to produce the Borg
> > filter? and will there be a second run of joy riders?
> >
> > --M
> >
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