First of all, congratulations to all of you who have successful CD projects and live gigs underway or completed. I'm very much an amateur musician, but I hope to have a self-produced CD completed in 2002 as well. I've been moving toward an all-electronic sound, as time and equipment budget allow. Last year I finished off the A-100 cabinet with four rows of modules, comprising a fairly comprehensive three-VCO voice and a sequencer row. For analog percussion I added a Vermona DRM-1 II, a MAM MB33 II for 303 sounds, and a Spectral Audio Neptune for Minimoog sounds. I also added a Regelwerk for creating drum/bass patterns, and for real-time interaction with the A100 and Matrix 1000. (I find having the Regelwerk's faders and buttons patched into the A100 via the A191 module to be a very pleasant way to work.) Unfortunately, my Matrix 1000 has suddenly joined the MemoryMoog and Juno 106 on the sick list. Now I'm without an analog polysynth, putting the whole business on hold until I repair the Oberheim or replace it. The last piece of the puzzle is a Vocoder. The Doepfer Vocoder modules would be nice, but chances are I'll either get a standalone Vocoder, or replace the Matrix 1000 with a virtual analog machine with built-in vocoder effects. I'm trying to decide how much of an analog purist to be. The Waldorf Q and Access Virus both seem nice, but if I can scrape together enough, I'd rather have a Jomox SunSyn. Another new direction for me is that I'm spending less and less time in front of the keyboard, and more and more time in front of the A100 and Regelwerk, creating live interactive music with the step sequencers, random LFOs, switches, buttons and faders. There's lots more to explore in this area, and I expect this to be a major focus for me in 2002. Joe
Message
Re: New directions for '02
2002-01-03 by buechlerjoe
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.