Cherry Audio Releases VM900 Collection for Voltage Modular!

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With the sound, look, and feel that started it all, the Cherry Audio/MRB VM900 Collection delivers the audio and visual experience of the legendary 1960s and 1970s-era Moog 900-series modules with spine-tingling impact and accuracy. Every detail has been expertly reproduced, for a virtual window into the halcyon days of early analog synthesis. Award-winning synth designer Mark Barton’s (MRB) proprietary DSP coding reproduces each and every sonic nuance with unprecedented accuracy.

https://youtu.be/d9mEAoWa4e0

The VM900-series designs remain true to the originals, and have not been altered or updated to reflect modern trends. Panel layouts and operation have been preserved in order to present a one-to-one early analog experience like no other. From oscillator drift to warm mixer overdrive to painstakingly reproduced panel art, it’s all there. And with 27 modules, the Cherry Audio/MRB VM900 Collection represents all of the commonly produced 900-series modules, including the early 901-style and later 921-style oscillators, both in single and “ABBB” grouped module versions. The coveted 904 ladder filter is also included in lowpass and highpass versions as well as an “ABC” combo version with the 904C Coupler module for endless filter curve flavors. The famous CP3 Mixer includes both early and later circuit styles for vintage-correct overdrive or purer tones. We’ve also included a unique Keyboard/VCO Interface module that allows three-voice chordal “paraphonic” operation and three highly-adjustable independent glides.

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A classic modular system couldn't possibly be complete without the 960-series sequencer. Originally used by Klaus Schulze, Tangerine Dream, and Kraftwerk, this is the eight-stage step sequencer that set the standard, and we've replicated it exactly (along with the accompanying 962 Sequential Switch module). Actually, we added one extra feature - a 1/12 V quantized output for each sequence row, which greatly simplifies the creation of chromatic melodies.

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Perhaps the star of the show is the VM1630 Frequency Shifter. Notoriously difficult to properly emulate in software and hardware, Mark Barton's advanced DSP replicates every nuance of this incredible-sounding module. From subtle vibrato, to wild phaser-like tones, to ring modulation-style alien swoops and metallic clangs, the VM1630 absolutely nails the jaw-dropping sound of this rare and desirable classic.

The Cherry Audio/MRB VM900 Collection is simply a “must-have” module set for all purveyors of vintage analog synthesis. It’s a no-brainer for existing Voltage Modular users, and for new users, it’s fully compatible with our FREE Voltage Modular Nucleus Edition, with no operational limitations. The Cherry Audio/MRB VM900 Collection for Voltage Modular includes all 27 modules, plus hundreds of presets and variations, for a fraction of the cost of a vintage Moog modular - just $79 - less than $3 per module! - and it’s available now at the Cherry Audio store! A seven-day free trial of the VM900 Collection is also available.

- Dan @ Cherry Audio

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Nice! Gonna check it out after watching the video :)

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yawn... I guess the goal is to copy every synth design ever created. Something wrong with unique an interesting, original design I guess :shrug:

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I don’t mind if Cherry Audio are becoming the Behringer of softsynths if it makes for more like this and it should be good if Mark Barton coded it. Hoping for something more West Coast though at some point.

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I like west coast stuff, I'd like to see some decent sample manipulation. E.g. cv controllable granular and tape machine stuff. Scrubbing, infinite overdub and micro sampling etc. Eventually some video synthesis would be super cool. But yeah the Behringer analogy seems applicable...

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pekbro wrote: Thu Oct 14, 2021 7:20 pm yawn... I guess the goal is to copy every synth design ever created. Something wrong with unique an interesting, original design I guess :shrug:
It's What The People Crave
Softsynth addict and electronic music enthusiast.
"Destruction is the work of an afternoon. Creation is the work of a lifetime."

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They should copy the DeepMind and call it the CA Extensive Brain or something. See how they like it.
If they are going to copy stuff, they could at least be champions at the same time.

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But copying behringer would be like copying McDonald’s.

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pekbro wrote: Thu Oct 14, 2021 7:20 pm yawn... I guess the goal is to copy every synth design ever created. Something wrong with unique an interesting, original design I guess :shrug:
Isn't that interesting, original design up to us, with all the modules available in VM? ;)
DarkStar, ... Interesting, if true
Inspired by ...

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I dunno, imo there are only a handful of devs who seems to know much about how modular synthesizers really work in the real world, no doubt I am biased about such things though. :shrug:

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Right, in general I'm more excited by things like HetrickCV where modules are designed to support more esoteric synthesis techniques. But Cherry Audio deserve some credit here for making a good dev kit so that people with that insight can do their thing. Goofy modules often pair well with simple ones...

Frequency shifting certainly counts as a cool esoteric synthesis thing. Would be nice if you could inject your own modulator waves (like the Doepfer A-126-2 or the Sketchy Labs Freak Shift); that's one downside of focusing on classic systems.

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I don't know what the beef is here, to me it sounds really good, very close to the original (from what I can tell from videos about the original, I'll probably never be even close to one).

Also as far as I know there aren't many emulations of this out there, at least not as a true modular system. I like it, they are carving out a niche for themselves, I'll say that makes sense.

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flori89 wrote: Fri Oct 15, 2021 11:21 am I don't know what the beef is here, to me it sounds really good, very close to the original (from what I can tell from videos about the original, I'll probably never be even close to one).

Also as far as I know there aren't many emulations of this out there, at least not as a true modular system. I like it, they are carving out a niche for themselves, I'll say that makes sense.
Nobody really said anything bad about it, mostly just some eyebrow raising at the course they seem to be taking lately. I'm sure it's fine :)

Though, personally I'd rather see some of the old Roland modular synths than Moog if they are going to copy stuff. :shrug:

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pekbro wrote: Sat Oct 16, 2021 9:54 am
flori89 wrote: Fri Oct 15, 2021 11:21 am I don't know what the beef is here, to me it sounds really good, very close to the original (from what I can tell from videos about the original, I'll probably never be even close to one).

Also as far as I know there aren't many emulations of this out there, at least not as a true modular system. I like it, they are carving out a niche for themselves, I'll say that makes sense.
Nobody really said anything bad about it, mostly just some eyebrow raising at the course they seem to be taking lately. I'm sure it's fine :)

Though, personally I'd rather see some of the old Roland modular synths than Moog if they are going to copy stuff. :shrug:
Isn't that the same course that they were going the whole time? If I check the year one and year two release history, the focus is pretty much on replicating old synths and modules.

At least the stuff directly from CA, there are plenty of other people contributing there.

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Well no actually, for quite a while, it was just about the modular system. The clone thing came later
IIRC.

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