Requires Real Player...EWWWWWW!tconrardy wrote:http://www.cavestudio.com/S+V/moog_endless.htmldeastman wrote:A few years back there was a Moog modular that was always streaming live over the internet, both audio and video. I'm too lazy to look it up, but I think it was called "Moog Endless" or something.emdot_ambient wrote:I've always dreamed of setting up a big modualr system like that and then setting up a self-generating patch and pumping it out live over teh internets, making adjustments to it as the mood hits me....wonder how feasible that is?Muff Wiggler wrote:found nightly floating around the room that the synth resides in, expiring (or escaping?) into eternity after a few reflections from walls and ductworkemdot_ambient wrote:Sooper-ultra-sweet, but...where's all the music you make on it
Tim
Lets see some studio pics
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- KVRAF
- 6496 posts since 26 Nov, 2004 from Frederick, MD
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- KVRAF
- 2017 posts since 21 Mar, 2002 from Hutchinson, Kansas
As some of you know, I have spent the past six months building a studio in my basement. I have, so far, only finished the control room (and even that needs some bits and pieces added, like trim around the window and floor). There is also a vocal booth (nearly finished) a reverb chamber (still working on that) and a sort of live room (basically a big, unfinished space where drums, Hammond, etc will go). My baby grand piano is upstairs in the dining room (high ceiling, wood floor, sounds great!). I have installed XLR and 1/4" panels in the wall up there so I can record the piano remotely.
The control room was entirely built by myself and a friend from the ground up. I am not, I emphasize, knowledgeable in the ways of construction, so this was a real adventure. I designed the room so that it meets the cubic footage requirements for an acoustically sound space, and there are no parallel walls (the east and north walls are set to just over a 5 degree angle from the south and west walls). Walls were all double-framed and isolated. This was very much a DIY project. I made the desk, the big rack (the rollaway rack was purchased from Guitar Center, the monitor stands from Musicians' Fiend), and even the acoustic panels and bass traps. Here's what it looks like so far:

Desk with V-Synth GT, 24" iMac, MotorMix, Event 2020bas monitors, Frontier Designs Tranzport. In the rack: Allen + Heath mixer, Effectron II, XLR patchbay, Furman line conditioner. Teac 80-8 reel-to-reel on top.

South-East corner. PPG Wave 2.2 peeking in on the left, Minimoog (restored by Analogics and housed in curly maple cabinet), Prophet-5 (ditto), '50s-era Brenell tube Tape Echo, homemade Theremin (PAIA/Big Briar hybrid). On the bookcase: ARP Sequencer, Wersimatic drum machine, oscillator, Roland MIDI-to-CV converter, Sequential Model 800 sequencer, Small Stone phaser, Univox drum machine, assorted stomp boxes, manuals and tapes. DIY bass trap, HF absorbers on the walls.

North-East corner: EMS VCS3 w/ DK2 keyboard, Roland CR-78 drum machine. Homemade bass trap.

East wall: ARP Odyssey, PPG Wave 2.2, another view of the Mini and Prophet-5.

This wall is angled between the North and West walls. A DIY mid-high absorber hangs above a Chroma Polaris, and Oberheim DX drum machine, and an ARP Omni II.

South wall: The Big Fella. 70+ modules of Syntehsizers.com and Blacet goodness, sitting atop a homemade rack. Oscilloscope on the right. Lots of patch cables.

DIY rack. Column 1: Furman line conditioner, MOTU 828 MkII, 3 x Neutrik patchbays, Chandler Limited EMI/Abbey Road TG-2 preamp, Aphex compressor, vintage LA3A compressor, TC Intonator, dbx compressor, Eventide Clockworks H-910 Harmonizer, Aphex Aural Exciter.
Column 2: Furman Line Conditioner, M-Audio MIDIsport 8 x 8, TC M-300, Muse Receptor, Lexicon MX200, Lexicon MPX-1, Lexicon Jamman, Lexicon Vortex, Capybara 320 (Kyma), Ensoniq Mirage.
Column 3: Furman Line Conditioner, Emagic AMT-8, Korg Wavestation A/D, Casio VZ10m, Akai Z-4 (with all options), Roland MKS-30, Roland MKS-50, Roland JV-880, Yamaha TX-802.
There's lots of stuff not shown here, including guitars, ethnic instruments, organs, a few more synths, etc.
The control room was entirely built by myself and a friend from the ground up. I am not, I emphasize, knowledgeable in the ways of construction, so this was a real adventure. I designed the room so that it meets the cubic footage requirements for an acoustically sound space, and there are no parallel walls (the east and north walls are set to just over a 5 degree angle from the south and west walls). Walls were all double-framed and isolated. This was very much a DIY project. I made the desk, the big rack (the rollaway rack was purchased from Guitar Center, the monitor stands from Musicians' Fiend), and even the acoustic panels and bass traps. Here's what it looks like so far:

Desk with V-Synth GT, 24" iMac, MotorMix, Event 2020bas monitors, Frontier Designs Tranzport. In the rack: Allen + Heath mixer, Effectron II, XLR patchbay, Furman line conditioner. Teac 80-8 reel-to-reel on top.

South-East corner. PPG Wave 2.2 peeking in on the left, Minimoog (restored by Analogics and housed in curly maple cabinet), Prophet-5 (ditto), '50s-era Brenell tube Tape Echo, homemade Theremin (PAIA/Big Briar hybrid). On the bookcase: ARP Sequencer, Wersimatic drum machine, oscillator, Roland MIDI-to-CV converter, Sequential Model 800 sequencer, Small Stone phaser, Univox drum machine, assorted stomp boxes, manuals and tapes. DIY bass trap, HF absorbers on the walls.

North-East corner: EMS VCS3 w/ DK2 keyboard, Roland CR-78 drum machine. Homemade bass trap.

East wall: ARP Odyssey, PPG Wave 2.2, another view of the Mini and Prophet-5.

This wall is angled between the North and West walls. A DIY mid-high absorber hangs above a Chroma Polaris, and Oberheim DX drum machine, and an ARP Omni II.

South wall: The Big Fella. 70+ modules of Syntehsizers.com and Blacet goodness, sitting atop a homemade rack. Oscilloscope on the right. Lots of patch cables.

DIY rack. Column 1: Furman line conditioner, MOTU 828 MkII, 3 x Neutrik patchbays, Chandler Limited EMI/Abbey Road TG-2 preamp, Aphex compressor, vintage LA3A compressor, TC Intonator, dbx compressor, Eventide Clockworks H-910 Harmonizer, Aphex Aural Exciter.
Column 2: Furman Line Conditioner, M-Audio MIDIsport 8 x 8, TC M-300, Muse Receptor, Lexicon MX200, Lexicon MPX-1, Lexicon Jamman, Lexicon Vortex, Capybara 320 (Kyma), Ensoniq Mirage.
Column 3: Furman Line Conditioner, Emagic AMT-8, Korg Wavestation A/D, Casio VZ10m, Akai Z-4 (with all options), Roland MKS-30, Roland MKS-50, Roland JV-880, Yamaha TX-802.
There's lots of stuff not shown here, including guitars, ethnic instruments, organs, a few more synths, etc.
- addled muppet weed
- 111294 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
f**k 
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- KVRAF
- 2017 posts since 21 Mar, 2002 from Hutchinson, Kansas
You know, you could live quite comfortably in the reverb chamber. Assuming the missus doesn't object...vurt wrote:f**k
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Muzik 4 Machines Muzik 4 Machines https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=9550
- KVRAF
- 7829 posts since 6 Oct, 2003 from Quebec
- addled muppet weed
- 111294 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
Scot Solida wrote:You know, you could live quite comfortably in the reverb chamber. Assuming the missus doesn't object...vurt wrote:f**k
its tempting, id need a months holiday there just to play with the modular
i honestly dont think id have time to sleep if i owned half of that
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- KVRAF
- 2017 posts since 21 Mar, 2002 from Hutchinson, Kansas
Credit for those must go to Wes Taggart at www.analogics.org. He did a beautiful job getting those instruments into tip-top condition and building those cabinets. He's a real craftsman. The Prophet didn't work well at all when I sent it to him and it now plays like new. The Mini played, but was also in pretty sorry condition. Wes turned it into a synth that inspires me every time I turn it on. I don't think it's drifted out of tune once since he did the work a year ago.Muzik 4 Machines wrote:wowo dude , you have lot of nice hardware!
really like the mini and P5 in clear wood, really awesome sight
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- KVRAF
- 4222 posts since 23 Feb, 2004 from Tucson Arizona USA
Scot Solida wrote:As some of you know, I have spent the past six months building a studio in my basement. I have, so far, only finished the control room (and even that needs some bits and pieces added, like trim around the window and floor). There is also a vocal booth (nearly finished) a reverb chamber
Somewhere in Japan, there is actually a room large enough to be used as a Reverb Chamber, and somehow, Scot owns it.
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- KVRAF
- 2017 posts since 21 Mar, 2002 from Hutchinson, Kansas
Well, it's only in Kansas, and it isn't very big (14' x 14'), but it does have a concrete floor and paneled walls. We are doing all sorts of things to extend the reflection time, using different reflective materials, gobos, etc. It'll never be a large hall, but it will give the recordings a unique space.james0tucson wrote:Scot Solida wrote:As some of you know, I have spent the past six months building a studio in my basement. I have, so far, only finished the control room (and even that needs some bits and pieces added, like trim around the window and floor). There is also a vocal booth (nearly finished) a reverb chamber
Somewhere in Japan, there is actually a room large enough to be used as a Reverb Chamber, and somehow, Scot owns it.
- KVRAF
- 1821 posts since 26 Nov, 2005 from Where silence and chaos meet.
I was expecting Scot to post in this thread sooner or later, and as usual, the man doesn't dissapoint. nice selection mate! although people would melt just at the sight of a moog modular, you actually deserve my respect for the EMS. that piece of gear in this serious looking studio is the proof that you are into this just for the knob twiddling!!!!
It's not what you use, it's how you use it...
- Beware the Quoth
- 35449 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
Wow. Very nice indeed.Scot Solida wrote:As some of you know, I have spent the past six months building a studio in my basement.
An idiot on Set Theory:
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
"In some cases there is an object called red that contains everything that is red. In much the same way a pot is a plate."
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- KVRAF
- 2685 posts since 14 Jul, 2005 from Australia
Hey, really sorry it took me so long to respond. I use the RK1 room kit from ...thecontrolcentre wrote:Looks very smart and clean ... I like all blueness. What sort of acoustic tiles are those on your walls?soundpalace wrote:My new studio, several months in the makingThe cables are neater than in these pics now.
Really simple but works well for me
Cheers
Fots
http://www.soundacoustics.com.au/
Costs around $550 AU
The blue you see is the new colour of that wall, we made it a feature wall
Cheers
Fots
Last edited by fgimian on Wed May 14, 2008 8:53 am, edited 1 time in total.


