You can't buy talent. But you can try. This blog is about music, technology, guitars, synths, keyboard, amps, recording, computers, cubase, logic, sonar, steinberg, roland, korg, fender, gibson, boss.
You can't buy talent. But you can try. This blog is about music, technology, guitars, synths, keyboard, amps, recording, computers, cubase, logic, sonar, steinberg, roland, korg, fender, gibson, boss.
the MFB Synth II does sound great, but, to be accurate, it has DCOs, not VCOs - so it isn't completely analog.
ReplyDeleteA DCO is analog, it's simply locked to a digital clock. The signal is analog though - there is no D/A converter involved in the audio signal path.
ReplyDeleteDCOs do sound thinner, because the waveform is more uniform than a VCO. A prime example is the difference between the VCO based Xpander and the DCO Matrix6.
Hi there!
ReplyDeleteActually the MFB Synths has analog Oscillator, but the MFB synths lite has Digital Oscillator.
I own a MFB synth lite (DCO and VCF) and it sounds really amazingly punchy an moogy for its size.
For me no matter DCO or VCO, if you have a good filter section.
i have an mfb synth lite 2 (the really small one), digital oscillators, analogue filter. it sounds good, except one of the oscillators comes and goes as it pleases. also has some annoying operational quirks (which the manufacturer describes as features!) and often convoluted operation (well there are limited buttons, so not surprising.) a mixed bag, but at least it's tiny.
ReplyDeletewhere can you buy these things?
ReplyDeleteone of my last roomates expended much time and effort just finding someone in the u.s. who could sell him the mfb-502 drum machine. very disappointing. it was pretty crappity sounding. cheap build, cheap sounds, no redeeming character really. im pretty skeptical of them myself. if it seems too good to be true it probably is.
ReplyDeletethats killed that, stone dead.
ReplyDeletei've owned a mfb-502 and an mfb synth ii. they're both amazing instruments for the price. the mfb-502's internal sequencer is a little wonky, but it has an amazingly big kick drum. i really like the hand claps too. the synth is awesome; it has _vco's_, not dco's (only the lites have dcos). you can get a lot of the classic kraftwerk sounds out of it with little effort.
ReplyDeleteHmm. DCO's are in my Juno 60, and it certainly can't be said to sound thin. It's very warm, plump, and creamy.
ReplyDeleteDCOs are NOT analog.
ReplyDeleteThe ICs in Junos (for example) are digital in and digital out.
Look at the spec sheet from the makers.
Just because a digital signal is treated as analog doesn't make IT analog itself.
If that was so, all digital synths and CD players would be considered analog because they end up moving a speaker.
Numerically-controlled/ oscillor/Digitally-Controlled Oscillator/DCO = either a Voltage-Controlled Oscillator, locked to a Digital-to-Analog Convertor OR
ReplyDeletea Digital Waveform Generator.
Thus, DCO can mean two entirely different things.
Also it was the Juno 106 that has DCO's. It's publicly agreed upon that the DCO's in this synth are VCO's controlled by a DAC. If that is untrue, however, than, so be it. Honestly I've never had a pre-90's japanese synth break down on me; so I've never worried about the insides. Wish I could say the same about the arps.
Taking a look at the pictures of the MFB lite's circuit board, it would appear that it uses DCO's...the Digital Waveform Generator kind.
Anybody pop open the hood of the 502?