Added: 3 years ago
From: synthpro
Views: 1,124
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  • Ha ha! You still have that little Casio at 1:42? Man I played with that thing when I was little (about 25 years ago!) LOL

  • @BamaRailfan Yeah, I still have it. It was my grandfathers and when I was little I would go to his house and play with it. When he passed away I got it and have really used it on a few songs.

  • good music

  • Thank you!

  • Great setup you have there.

  • Thank you! The only thing that has changed is that now there is a polymoog 280a.

    Thanks for watching!

  • Well done. It reminds me of the Synth museum video. I've owned many synths over the years and the Korgs and Yamahas have held up best. My Casio PT50 still works. An ARP died suddenly. As for getting modern synths to sound vintage consider the Moogerfooger line and dirtying up the sound by inserting an amp in the signal path provided the amp has a line out. Using the Phatty filter limits one to single trigger.

  • Thanks! The synth museum video is where I got the idea. Korg and yamaha do make great gear. I do wish I had a nice Minimoog model D. The only thing that I don't like about the Little phatty is that the buttons are not real sensitive and you end up hitting the buttons 3 or 4 times before it changes. Thanks for watching.

  • I have the same experience. Perhaps Moog should have released a Minimoog Classic in addition to or instead of the Voyager Old School. Anybody wondering about the Polymoog and its design should consider that it was a sardine can for its circuitry. Basically it was a divide down organ type phase-locked lopped to 2 audio range oscillators, then a set of 71 keyers with basic amp envelope and shelving filter. Add Moog VCF and 3 band parametric EQ. It was also velocity sensitive. Early tech, though.

  • I agree. Moog should look at what they had in the 70's. I am not saying what they have now is bad, but I think they should have stuck with the instruments that made moog sucessful in the beginning. They could still build the new stuff to. That is just my thought about it.

  • What sounds and backings did u use on the i4S? I own 1 and would love to know

  • I did not use it on this video. I used only the Moog Little Phatty and I layered the sounds on my multitracker, but I use the i4S a lot. I just about use every sound on it. My favorite sounds are space wing, 50's Scifi, Stormcloud, Leeeed, sweep, and Atmosphere. There are a lot more sounds I like, but just thought I would name a few. The floppy disk drive is broke on mine, so no programming until I get that fixed. It is a tough built machine.

    Thanks for checking out my video.

  • This song is pretty Kraftwerkian :D Very nice collection of keyboards there :)

  • It does have a Kraftwerk feel to it. Thanks for watching!

  • Nice setup you got there. The little phatty for an analog monosynth and the radias for the polyphonic stuff makes a great combo.

  • Thanks, It is!

  • Thanks! I did make the music. Sorry to hear about your MC-505!

  • nice video, and very nice gear... :D

    did you made the song in the video?

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