I think that Yamaha has lost it. Since they dropped their Plg-range, they have had nothing new to offer the VA-crowd. AFAIK, they believe that people don't want to tweak their own sounds anymore (which is a shame), and have started to concentrate on main-stream instruments instead. I have owned (and still own) the EX5, S30, plg-150dx, plg-150an, CS2x and AN200 (have A3000/A5000 still) and deeply miss their "tweakable" instruments deeply. To bad that they leave the field open to Roland and others. //Daniel On Sun, Jun 13, 2010 at 9:33 PM, Jeff <jf.serviere@...> wrote: > > > I agree with Peter : you can build a decent analog mono synthesizer with > "off the shelf" inexpensive ICs, there are some projects available on > the net. Take a look at the Paia "Fatman" and all the possible mods . > But you need a rather good electronic background to understand how these > humble devices work if you want to try more than the basic Fatman. > Others such as Doepfer sell modular kits : all you need is a basic > hobbyist knowledge (how to make solders, read a schematic diagram). > A polysynth is something possible but would be difficult for a hobbyist > because of the micro controller programming (for the keyboard interface) > and the huge amount of ICs necessary (one voice = VCO + VCA + VCF + LFO > + at least one ADSR). The dedicated ICs such as the famous Curtis are no > longer available or at an excessive price. Only for very skilled and > wealthy hobbyists ! > IMHO the "real analog sound" is somewhere a myth. OK, if you listen to a > big Moog or a Pro 5 or other famous monsters of the past, it sounds > good, but not without some additional effects (spring reverb, tape > delay, analog phasing and other vintage stuff...). And not all the > analog synths sound like a modular Moog or an ARP.... but all of them > were unreliable ! > Cheers > J.F. > > Peter Korsten a �crit : > > > > > Op 13-6-2010 15:48, Paul T schreef: > > > > > yes indeed. I'm not talking about 'me' though, I'm talking about the > > mass market synthesizer 'scene' which was the topic, it's about what > > yamaha does next not about what we can do now (I've got enough synths > > for now anyway in some analog). :) > > > > Sure, but the issue there is that making pure analogue synths is > > expensive, even when mass-produced, when compared to digital (virtual > > analogue) synthesis. So that's why the DIY route probably offers the > > most prospects, if you insist on going 'true' analogue. > > > > - Peter > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [AN1x] Where's Waldo? (er, um, Yamaha... )
2010-06-13 by Daniel Lehtihet
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