> I have a book on synthesizers somewhere around here which is a compilation of > articles from Keyboard. On chapter is called "The Most Dangerous Synth in the > World" and is about Keith Emerson's Moog. The extended frequency range is > explained to have resulted in the enormous sound he got. The author quotes > technicians who had to deal with blown tweeters and subs on a regular basis. I read somewhere in an analog vs. digital debate where someone speculated that Bob Moog would have probably used brighter sounding oscillators if it had been practical at the time; I don't know whether that's true or not (and I'm definitely not an electrical engineer BTW so take any of my theories with a grain of salt). Anyway, now we're trying to imitate endearing analog imperfections with digital devices but, in the day, the analog pioneers would have probably given their right arms for some of the digital capabilities that exist today. It's always fun to get sounds from your synth that go beyond the scope of what you'd normally expect (e.g. analog-ish sounds from a DX7)but there's also something to be said for using particular synths for what they do best (or for what other synths can't do as well). Because of that, I tend to think of analog/virtual analog for warm, soft, & murky sounds.
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Re: [AN1x] Aliasing
2005-04-12 by Dan
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