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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

If you don't know what it is, it's two Sega Genesis (Mega Drive) sound chips (Yamaha 2612 in V1, and uhh, some other number in V2) in a small aluminium box with a boatload of faders to control every aspect of each operator, some LFOs to modulate them, and an arpeggiator/sequencer (I never use).

You might think it sounds like a Sega Genesis game all the time, but it does not. The LFOs really open up the 2612. It does some amazing performance tricks you certainly don't hear in Sonic the Hedgehog. But, it does those, too. Channel your inner Yuzo Koshiro, then make it sound like something entirely else.

A while back, Twisted Electrons saw fit to make the firmware open source, and it's wonderful how much functionality they've added. Looping envelopes that can loop from different points in the six-stage envelopes, new voicing options, a MIDI tool to change settings from your PC, heck, a couple weeks ago they added the ability to change the scaling of the envelopes. It came out four years ago, and the updates keep on coming.

Just so I don't sound too much like a fanboy, I will qualify that it is a bit of a janky box. Voice stealing is weird sometimes, and these chips are noisy and scummy sounding. It's probably the most analog sounding digital thing I've ever heard. I guess there are still a few minor bugs with the firmware, but none that I personally notice.

Still, it's only 450 Euros and eminently worth it.

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[-] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago

There are cheaper ways to do it. Paying for the big names gets you a lot of functionality sooner which helps you actually making music I’ve learned. There is just a romanticism to reaching critical mass of utilities and building blocks to me. A truly large well thought out Modular is incredible for sound design.

But there is also VCV rack which can do the exact same thing for free haha.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

But there is also VCV rack which can do the exact same thing for free haha.

Yeah, this is another sticking point for me with modular. I can spend a hundred on a single LFO module. I can code up infinite LFOs in Csound for free. It's a hard sell. I absolutely would love to plan out a wall of knobs and buttons, but yeah. I'll stick to the free coding for now.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago

That’s my plan haha. The only big modular thing I’m planning at the moment is using logic circuits and CMOS chips. They call them Lunettas, really cool noisy synths. It’s not very interoperable with my set up, but I figured I’d at least have fun jamming and get some wonderful samples to mangle :)

[-] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Lunettas

Whoa. Those look like fun. A bit limited like you say, but still a lot of noisy, farty fun.

Edit: "limited" was not the correct word. More like "insane".

this post was submitted on 10 Feb 2024
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Synthesizers

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