On Fri, 13 May 2016 08:30:41 -0400, Joe Hartley wrote: >On Fri, 13 May 2016 06:31:32 +0200 >Ralf Mardorf <ralf.mardorf@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> The first band I played guitar, it were already the 80s, we first >> had a single Moog >> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moog_Concertmate_MG-1 > >A fun fact - in the US, the MG-1 was sold by the big (at the time) >electronics retailer Radio Shack under their Realistic line. I had >one given to me in the mid-80s by a friend, and it went to my nephew >who used it in his band. They had a fight over it one day when someone >changed some settings and they could not recreate some sound they >liked! It came back to me after my nephew passed and then went to my >son's band, who embraced it and even gave it its own Facebook page. >Long live the MG-1! :) Today I read about another remake of a vintage synth, from 2015: http://www.thomann.de/gb/korg_pro_arp_odyssey.htm This dealer doesn't sell the original Oberheim SEM remake, but analog synth based on SEM filters or Moog filters as well as Doepfer SEM filters and a SEM from another vendor. They sell the Dave Smith & Tom Oberheim OB-6 Synthesize (btw. the only real analog synth I own is the Matrix-1000) and they sell a lot of new Moog gear. IMO most remakes are totally overpriced. For my iPad I got the Aturia SEM emulation for IIRC 6,- EUR. It syncs to the iPad MusicStudio. FWIW since a few days MusicStudio is available for Android devices too. I still had no time to make a song, to export the iPad song to Ardour (Linux) and mix it (I don't have a sound card for the iPad, only one for my Linux PC), so I can't say if the SEM emulation is ok, but the emulation on the iPad sounds promising. We are back to a situation where real analog synth are again to expensive for many musicians. Hopefully the proprietary software emulations are ok. Regarding digital synth, if I compare Hexter (Linux) with my real DX7 from the first generation, then Hexter (RME HDSPe AIO sound card) is unable to hold a candle to the DX7. Hexter is missing richness. On the iPad I have the Vogel CMI. The Vogel CMI seems to be a complete rip-off. I can't compare it with the original Fairlight, but there's no need to do a direct comparison, the emulation seems to be nearly unusable. I already pay much more money than other apps usually cost for full versions, just to get the CMI light version and to pay for the full version doesn't promise real improvements. Yesterday I watched some Jean Michel Jarre and Klaus Schulze live videos. This synth music IMO isn't music for stage. I was bored silly. They don't perform, really work as musicians, they just push a key, at best a chord or touch a knob. Playing classical music on a Moog at least provides the audience an artist who is really working, playing an instrument. I was surprised about some sounds when listening to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MD-vYOCsgvY Regarding the Internet Isao Tomita also plays a Mellotron on A Night on Bare Mountain, that might explain why I was surprised about some sounds :D. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user