Nicholas, what can I say: I totally agree ! Even the Japanese now need to outsource the making of certain components to their arch enemies... I think the magazine that comes with the SX-150 is just absolutely great to a degree that I wish I understood Japanese. The CS-80 is shown in the section where they have hard vs soft. They have also assigned sufficient space to the mighty GX-1 in the Vintage Synth section. Now that I have managed to control the SX-150 via MIDI/CV it's even more fun, hence the track. It should be interesting to contact Gakken to find how many they have sold so far, so the SX-150 will find its appropriate place in the history of synths... The Mini Moogs went up 13,000, the Prophet-5 to 7,200, our beloved CS-80 to -ahem- 2,000, and nothing beats the DX-7 at 160,000, but of course we all know that it's not exactly an analog synth. Worsel --- In yamahacs80@yahoogroups.com, zaum <zaum@...> wrote: > > Fun and impressive from such a simple instrument. > > Just to tease you a bit, the SX-150 is actually made in China, though > it is a Japanese design that comes semi-assembled with a $30 "Science > for Adults" magazine. (well it's not really an "Adult" magazine, > ahem... it's just written on a layman's level rather than a kids level) > > There are a bunch of higher end Japanese magazines that come with > kits or collectables inside, though the one it comes in takes the > prize with other issues containing things like a dollhouse sized > working Theremin or a mechanical Edison style recording phonograph > that uses coffee cups, One good part is that the "gift" tends to be > good enough that bookstores keep them until they sell unlike typical > magazines. > > Tomita, a CS-80 user (but I fear he might have sold his to make > room in his studio) is in the magazine. > > The magazine has many neat rare synth pictures but conspicuously > absent is the Paia Gnome. While not a direct copy I'd call the SX-150 > a "lite" version of the Paia Gnome since it is more a synth than the > better known Stylophone, which it also resembles. Paia of course is > still in business. > > While I've not confirmed it, I suspect the SX-150 has the highest > number manufactured of any analog synth in history. >
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Re:Cheer up, Guys !
2009-06-01 by slipperysoles
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