THANKS FOR WATCHING MY VINTAGE SYNTHESIZER VIDEO !!!
I have worked with this equipment in the 1990's and made hundreds of songs and about 10 CDs with it. The video is from 1995 and digitized from VHS-tape - that's why the quality is so "excellent" ;-)
The equipment you see in the video has been sold many years ago, so you can stop asking me to sell it :-D
No not a MAC - it is an good old ATARI MEGAS ST with external 30-MB-Harddiskdrive - yes...MEGA-byte ;-) And the best: I still use it with Emagic Notator!!!
nowadays everythings softsynth virtual on the computer. nothing beats the real hardware IMO, for inspiration & creativity. computers are a great convenience though and it's nice having everything in one space.
Rubbish, the sounds are better with analog hardware but it doesn't matter whether you use a real synth or software for inspiration, you are only limited by your imagination. Plus the workflow on a software sampler is far quicker than hardware using scsi drives or dreaded floppy.
It's easier to get inspired by physical hardware, knobs, sliders and buttons you can touch & interact with than it is staring at an LCD clicking a mouse typing #s on a computer keypad.
Look at all the legendary music inspired & produced with simple hardware. What songs inspired by computers will even be remembered 10 years from now, let alone 5
Too much technical kills the creative
We could have all the gear in the world. Without artistry, what would we do with it?
@rg2027x You can keep software as simple as you like or as technical. You also are not limited to using a mouse, you can use a hardware controller like behringer bcr2000 etc to get good results or plenty of keyboards have controllers built in. I've used hardware for years and my workflow is far quicker with software, particularly when it comes to recalling your mix settings and samples. I still have a hardware setup but mainly use software for initial ideas as its quicker. Love analog though
THANKS FOR WATCHING MY VINTAGE SYNTHESIZER VIDEO !!!
I have worked with this equipment in the 1990's and made hundreds of songs and about 10 CDs with it. The video is from 1995 and digitized from VHS-tape - that's why the quality is so "excellent" ;-)
The equipment you see in the video has been sold many years ago, so you can stop asking me to sell it :-D
Maybe you like to check out my new song HEARTBEAT
otakumusicde 1 year ago
@ Leute von Facebook's "19 Zoll Stammtisch":
JA - ich stehe auf Oldschool-Trance ;-)
NEIN - ich hatte noch nie und will auch nie Buffalo-Schuhe :-)
Aber danke, daß Ihr mein Video so oft angeschaut habt!
otakumusicde 1 year ago
LOL! I still use my JX-10.
vortex3d 1 year ago
And what are you using these synthesizers for?
anonymusum 2 years ago
@anonymusum
Just listen to the soundtrack of the video ;-)
MusicStoreTV 1 year ago
WOW you really have limited stuff ^^
I mean i like old samplers but they have to be at least s-1000 so you at least have some options ^^
adrifromhh 2 years ago
was that a macII?
jonnymunday 3 years ago
No not a MAC - it is an good old ATARI MEGAS ST with external 30-MB-Harddiskdrive - yes...MEGA-byte ;-) And the best: I still use it with Emagic Notator!!!
otakumusicde 3 years ago
@otakumusicde
How about Cubase? From what I understand, that's what made the Atari ST so popular among studios.
douro20 4 months ago
nowadays everythings softsynth virtual on the computer. nothing beats the real hardware IMO, for inspiration & creativity. computers are a great convenience though and it's nice having everything in one space.
rg2027x 3 years ago 3
Rubbish, the sounds are better with analog hardware but it doesn't matter whether you use a real synth or software for inspiration, you are only limited by your imagination. Plus the workflow on a software sampler is far quicker than hardware using scsi drives or dreaded floppy.
maccagrabme 2 years ago
"Rubbish"?
LOL. whatever..
It's easier to get inspired by physical hardware, knobs, sliders and buttons you can touch & interact with than it is staring at an LCD clicking a mouse typing #s on a computer keypad.
Look at all the legendary music inspired & produced with simple hardware. What songs inspired by computers will even be remembered 10 years from now, let alone 5
Too much technical kills the creative
We could have all the gear in the world. Without artistry, what would we do with it?
rg2027x 2 years ago
@rg2027x You can keep software as simple as you like or as technical. You also are not limited to using a mouse, you can use a hardware controller like behringer bcr2000 etc to get good results or plenty of keyboards have controllers built in. I've used hardware for years and my workflow is far quicker with software, particularly when it comes to recalling your mix settings and samples. I still have a hardware setup but mainly use software for initial ideas as its quicker. Love analog though
maccagrabme 2 years ago