via this auction
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Moog Prodigy
via this auction
"Moog's mighty Moog Prodigy model #336A serial #2108 purchased in 1980 from E.U. Wurlitzer in Boston Massachusetts."
"Moog's mighty Moog Prodigy model #336A serial #2108 purchased in 1980 from E.U. Wurlitzer in Boston Massachusetts."
Labels:
MOOG
ROLAND PG-800 Programmer with Case
via this auction
"This Roland PG-800 Programmer was made in 1985 until 1988 and is a dedicated programmer for Roland JX-8P, MKS-70 and Super JX Synthesizers."
"This Roland PG-800 Programmer was made in 1985 until 1988 and is a dedicated programmer for Roland JX-8P, MKS-70 and Super JX Synthesizers."
Labels:
Roland
Novation A-Station
via this auction
"The A-Station is a remarkably compact polyphonic virtual analogue synthesizer. At just one rack unit high and measuring less than five inches from the rounded ends of its knobs to its tidy rear, it is a cunning gene-splice of Super BassStation body and Nova-style brain.
The A-Station powers up in Program mode -- that is, ready for you to play any of the 400 onboard patches. These are arranged in four banks of 100, and the first 200 are already filled with factory patches. The remaining 200 are blank, awaiting your own creations. Simply type in the bank and patch number on the rubber keypad and you're away. Or, to speed things up, the keypad's '+' and '-' keys allow you to step through the patches sequentially. Pressing and holding either of these keys advances your selection in groups of 10. Conveniently, Novation have positioned related factory sounds at these intervals. Thus locations 100, 110, 120, and so on are bass sounds, 106, 116, 126 are string sounds, and so it goes on. Since you can overwrite all patch locations, it's handy that they can be restored at any time, either by full bank or individually."
"The A-Station is a remarkably compact polyphonic virtual analogue synthesizer. At just one rack unit high and measuring less than five inches from the rounded ends of its knobs to its tidy rear, it is a cunning gene-splice of Super BassStation body and Nova-style brain.
The A-Station powers up in Program mode -- that is, ready for you to play any of the 400 onboard patches. These are arranged in four banks of 100, and the first 200 are already filled with factory patches. The remaining 200 are blank, awaiting your own creations. Simply type in the bank and patch number on the rubber keypad and you're away. Or, to speed things up, the keypad's '+' and '-' keys allow you to step through the patches sequentially. Pressing and holding either of these keys advances your selection in groups of 10. Conveniently, Novation have positioned related factory sounds at these intervals. Thus locations 100, 110, 120, and so on are bass sounds, 106, 116, 126 are string sounds, and so it goes on. Since you can overwrite all patch locations, it's handy that they can be restored at any time, either by full bank or individually."
Labels:
Novation
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