A 70's Synth You Made At Home With Monthly Magazines

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 663

  • @LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER
    @LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER  Před 2 lety +91

    NAME A DIY SYNTHESIZER

  • @ElektorTV
    @ElektorTV Před 2 lety +306

    Awesome! The entire Elektor Lab and editorial team loves this. Great video. Bravo.

    • @donttestme9546
      @donttestme9546 Před 2 lety +2

      Neat!

    • @TheTerracide
      @TheTerracide Před 2 lety +36

      Maybe a re-issue wirh modern components Eurorack size would be a great idea. A Formant 2022

    • @theh0r5e90
      @theh0r5e90 Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheTerracide I love this idea

    • @stefanhennig
      @stefanhennig Před 2 lety +7

      all hail Elektor! I wouldn't be where I am now were it not for you people and your magazine. Thank you!

    • @LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER
      @LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER  Před 8 měsíci +4

      aha great! no idea how i missed this comment. currently making the formant bigger, building the case today. nice one!

  • @trjaudio
    @trjaudio Před 2 lety +229

    I bought one of these in 2000 (ish). The unit had been sitting in a man’s closet since 1980 when he built it. When I got it, it was pretty cheap. I knew nothing about electronics. I was 18 years old and SO happy finding this synth. I started repairing it. Blew lots of transistor and ic’s along the way. A shame since some of the ic’s in this beast are very expensive today (used in the mini moot today. Fairchild 741 I think the ic was called. Was in the cco part of the Vco). Lots of stuff didn’t work, but eventually I got it going. I was obsessed with making it working and I vividly remember once I got the first oscillator up and running. I was SUPER happy (and had soldering iron burns on several fingers). I fixed it even further over the years. Made a new case. Custom front plates etc. put in some doepfer modules as well along with a diy ele4music filter (may ele4music Rest In Peace. He made diy synth modules in the early 2000s but since passed away because of cancer).
    I finally got a new and modern PSU which made the formant sound So much better. Really amazing sounding synth. I still don’t know tons about electronics, but can now read diagrams, fix synthesizers and other audio equipment. Buying old synths, repairing them and selling them, enabled me to save up enough money for me to visit my cousin in Texas for the summer. (Living In Denmark). Pretty awesome for a young guy like me.
    I have since sold the formant (along with book) to a group of elderly synth geeks.
    Good times.
    I was around 18 when I bought it. Living in my parents basement. Making music non stop as a hobby. Now married with 2 kids and making a living doing sound design and music composing for computer games (deep rock galactic is the most famous title). Once a synth geek always a synth geek.
    I was 18 back then. Sold the formant when I was 37. Will be turning 40 this spring.
    Life is weird and full of weird noises:)

    • @louistown7835
      @louistown7835 Před 2 lety +6

      I'm a music student and when playing Deep Rock mentioned to my friends how much I enjoyed the music, thanks for helping create such a cool game!

    • @LT.dans_new_legs
      @LT.dans_new_legs Před 2 lety +2

      Deep rock slaps. Thank you so much for being a part of its creation ❤

    • @trjaudio
      @trjaudio Před 2 lety +4

      @@LT.dans_new_legs thanks :) I have made a “how I made the soundtrack video”, if you are interested.

    • @trjaudio
      @trjaudio Před 2 lety +2

      @@louistown7835 thanks man:)

    • @RLVart
      @RLVart Před 2 lety +1

      fåk det er nice man - og vild med soundtracket, det passer godt sammen med spillet !

  • @andyp926
    @andyp926 Před 2 lety +10

    Oh boy, this is a holy grail video for me. My best mate and I built a synth based on these Formant designs back in the seventies, when I was about 16 and he was 17-18.
    We couldn't afford to buy the PCBs at first, so we actually photographed the track layouts in the mags and etched the boards ourselves using photo resist paint, a UV light and hot ferric chloride, all in my mum's kitchen.
    We couldn't afford the front panels either so we spent an entire summer in my parents back garden, wrangling sheet aluminium into L-shaped trays so the boards sat horizontally behind the front panels. The case was 1-inch angle aluminium rivited together into a semi-modular rack that looked remarkably like a fish tank before the wooden panels went on.
    We had a stroke of luck when a genuine ARP2600 keyboard appeared after the main synth had been accidentally thrown away (I kid you not!) And our unique touch was using four-position slider switches everywhere instead of patch leads. None of the pots or switches got labelled, but by the time it was finished we knew what every one did so never bothered!
    I have a couple of old black and white pictures of the guts of it somewhere, but I don't think I can post them in a CZcams comment.
    Suffice to say, it was a beast and it needed a lot of constant TLC, to the point where we joked about permanently installing a soldering iron in the lid of the case! But it sounded absolutely fab.
    My friend went off to uni and ended up playing in several bands, culminating in Red Shift and Beat the Drum who had some minor commercial success. The last two members of which are still writing music and even gigging now in their sixties, the other three all having died very young).
    My friend died suddenly from an undiagnosed brain tumour in his thirties and all his keyboards (including an electric piano and a string synth that we had also built together) ended up in his partner's loft. It was all such a weird situation that, to my eternal sorrow, I never got back in touch with his partner again after the funeral and never found out what happened to our lovely synth. I guess it was scrapped.
    Looking back, what amazing times.

  • @guyh3403
    @guyh3403 Před 2 lety +118

    SAM : Places two patch cables and creates several big phat sounds.
    ME : Tries to replicate on VCA-Rack and ends up with bleep bloop.

    • @tuff_lover
      @tuff_lover Před 2 lety +7

      Hackerman

    • @kimtae858
      @kimtae858 Před 2 lety +8

      Add some distortion early in your signal chain or (and this is the power move) just before the mixer, run your dry signal through reverb like Plateau then through distortion like Debriatus and then a LP filter to reign it back in. Chord changes sound absolutely massive!

    • @DavidBauer38
      @DavidBauer38 Před 2 lety +7

      Same for me trying to program my Kurzweil (yes digital is much different than analog, but…).
      4 layers and one hour later:
      Thinnest… Sawtooth… Ever….

    • @Pehr81
      @Pehr81 Před 2 lety +2

      you need filters, man

    • @TheDistur
      @TheDistur Před 2 lety +3

      Sam speaks synth.

  • @rjmackenzie
    @rjmackenzie Před 2 lety +80

    God damn I was feeling it at 13:40!!! Wasn't expecting this quality of a jam!

    • @Chloe-cv6wm
      @Chloe-cv6wm Před 2 lety

      You shoved a diode in your jacksy

    • @robertfletcher9899
      @robertfletcher9899 Před 2 lety +1

      I know! And just before that sounded like channeling early Tangerine Dream - fantastic!

    • @AwesomeGeorg
      @AwesomeGeorg Před 2 lety

      i

    • @kbtube8125
      @kbtube8125 Před 2 lety

      @@robertfletcher9899 simple minds "i travel" would drop right in.

  • @sonosus
    @sonosus Před 2 lety +52

    David Attenborough: hmm this bird has a characteristic red beak
    Sam: hmm this synthesizer has a characteristic blue circuit board

    • @ossiehalvorson7702
      @ossiehalvorson7702 Před 2 lety

      You birdwatch.
      I synthwatch.
      We are not the same.

    • @gorillaau
      @gorillaau Před 2 lety +1

      DA: Here we have Sam in his natural environment, before he migrates to his next gig.

  • @deantiquisetnovis
    @deantiquisetnovis Před 2 lety +14

    I built one back in the 80s when I was 16 or so. Still have it and it still works

  • @robertneely9422
    @robertneely9422 Před 2 lety +4

    Encountered this as it popped out randomly and was amazed to be reconnected to my past. I started buying Practical Electronics in 1964 when I was 13 and remember the magazines you showed. I also bought piles of Practical Wireless, Wireless World and later The Radio Constructor and then Electronics Today International. Without those magazines I wouldn't have gone to university to study "Electrical Sciences" and then spend my entire career in computing up to retirement many years ago. Amazing to think a random purchase of a magazine drove the rest of my life. In the 60s I was able to make "pocket money" building fuzz boxes, treble boosters, waa-waas, tremolos and reverbs, all from the designs in Practical Electronics. Now to browse further down memory lane with the images of the magazine contents. I must have studied them in great detail as even the advertisements are all very familiar.

  • @jamesh5460
    @jamesh5460 Před 2 lety +38

    Daft Punk needs to roll into the museum and throw down an improv music jam..... Speaking of which, your latest songs are great and hope you send out some more.

    • @joergfuchs8130
      @joergfuchs8130 Před 2 lety +1

      Like the sound and sequenzing at 12:00.
      This could be a great Song in Duft Punk Style

  • @damianm3226
    @damianm3226 Před 2 lety +80

    Woow, i knew those magazines existed but I never knew you could actually build a full working synth just by relying on them

    • @JETJOOBOY
      @JETJOOBOY Před 2 lety +6

      Well..
      Yes..!
      I was shocked that INPUT Magazine enabled me to prevent the USA 🇺🇸 Soviet War with BASIC!
      You cannot deny it worked!..
      WE ARE ALL ALIVE!..
      YOU'RE WELCOME!

    • @jfv65
      @jfv65 Před 2 lety +6

      Remember, NL had a pretty big electronics industry: Philips. Lots of people worked in that industry and in their free time they were hobbyists as well. My father was one of them.

    • @damianm3226
      @damianm3226 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jfv65 Nice, it’s good when enthusiastic people like to spend their free time sharing their knowledge. Well, I shouldn’t be so amazed when considering that synths are just oscillators and filters like most everyday circuit at the time (radios, TVs, etc.) and electronic magazine editors who were mostly deep heart hobbyists like your dad surely loved to teach young generations about synths and similar stuff that was exciting for them.

    • @tvdjeda
      @tvdjeda Před 2 lety +4

      In Yugoslavia there was even a whole computer you could build from magazine instructions with edvice how to optain certan components and there was one radio station that would transmit code for its games late at night. Electronic magazines were the real deal back in their day.

    • @shadowflash705
      @shadowflash705 Před 2 lety +4

      @@tvdjeda you know what's funny? In the 80s you could build a 80s computer using schematics from those magazines. Fast forward 40 years and... you can still build... a 80s computer at home. Because modern BGA components make it impossible to build a modern computer from parts at home. At least not without spending hundreds of thousands on equipment which is too much for hobby electronics.

  • @SimpleDIYElectroMusicProjects

    Wow, that ring modulator is making sounds straight from the Barron's "electronic tonalities" for the film Forbidden Planet!

    • @teaurn
      @teaurn Před 2 lety +2

      Exactly what came to my mind when I heard it - love that film! Shakespeare in Space! 😁

    • @gregbla
      @gregbla Před 2 lety

      @@teaurn o

  • @martindooley4439
    @martindooley4439 Před 2 lety +19

    Awesome, Sam you are an inspiration education needs folk like you to get kids to engage with stuff and just not software emulator s and apps. Growing up in the 70s and 80s half my mates were into synth pop and the other half into rock/metal. They all thought I was nuts liking both....

  • @Frekidog
    @Frekidog Před 2 lety +14

    I loved the July/August editions of Elektor. It featured 100+ small, easy to build projects.

    • @ulrichkliegis4138
      @ulrichkliegis4138 Před 2 lety +2

      And some issues later, they published all the corrections. The most impressive circuit was the Zero-Volts stabilizer. Guess how they did that... :)

  • @PrimitiveInTheExtreme
    @PrimitiveInTheExtreme Před 2 lety +4

    ✨wow✨

  • @Johnsormani
    @Johnsormani Před 2 lety +1

    Elektors office is in a Castle in the village where I live. I remember reading about the Formant back in the day. Once in a while you see one for sale loacally on marketplace

  • @Colin_Ames
    @Colin_Ames Před 2 lety +30

    Excellent! I think building the synth would actually be easier than playing it!

  • @jamesholden6508
    @jamesholden6508 Před 2 lety +7

    I had almost forgotten about these mags, what a major nostalgia trip! Then I remembered that the amp running my kitchen speakers is based on some design I got from Practical Electronics in the early 90s. Recapped it a couple of months ago, and it’s ready for another 30 years. Yaaaas!

  • @gallimead
    @gallimead Před 2 lety +9

    This has been a production of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. Love it.

    • @TheVirtualWatcher
      @TheVirtualWatcher Před 2 lety +1

      The Radiophonic Workshop were late into synthesizer usage. They didn't need it as they could create all they needed by other means ... just listen to the original Doctor Who theme, created by the magnificent Delia Derbyshire:- czcams.com/video/75V4ClJZME4/video.html

  • @ChoopCgen
    @ChoopCgen Před 2 lety +4

    You are a wonderful man , i m guitarist and i don't no why i watch this channel every time you post a new one..!
    Your conceptions are crazy, clever with real musical application.
    Thx man for the smile you give me ( us ) every time!
    I watch i learn thx

  • @shortlytall7926
    @shortlytall7926 Před 2 lety +11

    Dude. I look at that panel and would be like "oooh, turny thing go wewew".
    You speak the lingo, then make something I could dance to, swingin' them dials like a genius.
    Please make more songs, you're growing a fanbase I'm sure!

    • @ossiehalvorson7702
      @ossiehalvorson7702 Před 2 lety

      The greatest thing about him is that he's one of the only synth-centric channels that really tries to make regular music.
      I swear the rest of them absolutely despise their neighbors, and just started up a channel for an extra excuse to go, "Okay, it's Tuesday which is shrieking beep day, let's see what I come up with for shrieking beeps. Wonder if they'll move out this week."

  • @umbertoyltp
    @umbertoyltp Před 2 lety +6

    Wow, you pump out both great sqeeks and thumping grooves!
    A word of advice from a previous builder/owner: drop the fourth VCO and put in the 12 db VCF instead! It has a very strong and raw character while the 24 db VCF is sounding more sophisticated. And when you have two filters you can make vowel sounds like joy and yeah!
    For educational and practical purposes I suggest you restore the original internal wiring, it saves you a lot of patches, and it remains flexible to deviate from the obvious sound path.
    But what a massive sound!

  • @SCAPE0GOAT
    @SCAPE0GOAT Před 2 lety +3

    Yurrrsss. I made a 5mW Helium Neon laser in an aluminium casing from a Maplin kit in around 1988 ?? I was only a kid, and my brother couldn't believe it till I switched it on. I've been building more & more exotic lasers & controllers ever since. Totally made a shift in my life to the hobbies I follow. These magazines & build series instructions were so good, like supplying the PCB etching prints on an A4 sheet, circuit diagrams, theory, evolution etc. Just brilliant. They were absolutely a massive influence in my hobbies.

  • @WyldeThingsMusic
    @WyldeThingsMusic Před 2 lety +1

    I once had a non functioning Roland SH5. It was 1982 and I couldn’t find anyone to repair it. I eventually tracked down a guy who lived near Blackpool, rang him and he asked me to bring it to him. Turns out he was the owner and creator of Digisound synthesizers. A lovely guy who built modular synths in his garage. He fixed my SH5 and let me have a play on his synths.

  • @danielemilyjackson2488
    @danielemilyjackson2488 Před 2 lety +3

    Our 3-year-old asked me what musical instrument made a particular synth sound in a song he likes. I knew just the video to show him. 😁

  • @zebo-the-fat
    @zebo-the-fat Před 2 lety +4

    I remember drooling over the magazine articles back in the day, but never had the cash to build it (or the musical skill to use it!)

    • @jimmygervaisnet
      @jimmygervaisnet Před 2 lety

      Yeah I wonder how much the whole thing would end up costing. Musical skills shouldn't be an obstacle to have fun and explore. Where you at now? Any musical hobby?

  • @blahorgaslisk7763
    @blahorgaslisk7763 Před 2 lety +1

    The way these old synths were configured using patch wires feels so raw, in a good way. I remember some software that tried to replicate that back in the 90's. With the slow processors of the day they had to write a lot of the code using highly optimized assembler. The software was pretty good, but there's nothing like actually patching together a signal path and having manual control of every knob. But for me screwing around with the software emulations were enough to convince me that I really didn't have any talent for making music.

  • @xliquidflames
    @xliquidflames Před 2 lety +9

    Comment keeps getting deleted. Let's try this...
    This is quickly becoming one of my favorite channels on CZcams. I used to work for a company that starts with the word radio and ends with the word shack but they're out of business now. Cleaning up the back room one day I found a box of old catalogs from the 70s. They were called another name back then that rhymes with randy but starts with a T, not R. Those old randy but with a t catalogues had some crazy stuff in them. Awesome video.
    I guess mentioning company names is banned here because the comment is sticking now that I've modified it.

    • @LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER
      @LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER  Před 2 lety +2

      aaah yeah no idea how it actually works!

    • @xliquidflames
      @xliquidflames Před 2 lety +1

      @@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER it's all good, man. I had a channel at one time and dealt with the same thing. CZcams is weird sometimes.

    • @volvogamer
      @volvogamer Před 2 lety +1

      I can clearly remember the hours spent pawing over a "Randy" subtitute R for T, or M aplin catalogue as a teenager just wishing i had more money....

    • @belstar1128
      @belstar1128 Před 2 lety

      Tandy radioshack.

  • @jimhowells
    @jimhowells Před 2 lety +2

    This thing sounds like the theme to every 80s technology show on the BBC AND I LOVE IT!

  • @mattdrat3087
    @mattdrat3087 Před 2 lety +4

    The brain is such an amazing organ. I remember several of the front covers you showed even though I haven't seen them since they were published several decades ago....

  • @_Synthesize_Me_
    @_Synthesize_Me_ Před 2 lety +12

    Those oscillators sound incredible!

  • @UsagiElectric
    @UsagiElectric Před 2 lety +3

    I absolutely love the aesthetic of this one! And, it sounds pretty epic too!

  • @gfmoore
    @gfmoore Před 5 měsíci

    What a find for this channel. I was about 14 or 15 when I decided to build the PE Minisonic. It took me ages to get the parts together only having a paper round. I built the circuit on veroboard, but much of the print out in the magazine was wrong and it took me ages to debug. However, that process taught me so much about electronics and fault finding and has stood me in good stead all my life.
    I built the keyboard out of an old upright piano, lots of rubber bands and copper braid from coax cable. It was great, but so out of tune and flaky. I sold it to two guys who I think were amazed that I'd put it together. They got it for a steal (£50 I think). I wish I knew whether it was ever used. It had a proper sloping upright case and I used two bank of push switches to do various routings. I built a cut down one which I still have and keep meaning to get it working again, but it was the cost of a proper keyboard that always held me back. Then I discovered that girls were fun too :) and computers...
    Thanks, looking forward to browsing this channel.

  • @seankraft410
    @seankraft410 Před 2 lety +4

    When your shadow covers/uncovers the board, it looks like a dynamic color change based on the sound frequency. Cool way of looking at it.

  • @tapewolf
    @tapewolf Před 2 lety

    Fantastic, I really wanted one of these as a kid, and I still have both the original magazines and the photocopies of the articles Dad made when we looked into building one. Never got a modular and I don't really have room for one now, with all the other studio gear, so thanks for showing the Formant being put through its paces.

  • @aserta
    @aserta Před rokem

    I love that about stuff like that. You don't know the story, likely never will... but the stories it can tell, if you're willing to listen. :) They have charm in spades, something modern electronics rarely are able to convey if ever. At least in the 90's i'd find a gecko printed on an mother board or a cheer or a greeting. Those were the days.

  • @xmlthegreat
    @xmlthegreat Před 2 lety +4

    It sounds absolutely gnarly! What a time, when you could build from scratch a synthesiser, even without having much knowledge or experience, just sheer dedication.

    • @sn1000k
      @sn1000k Před 2 lety

      never more true than now my friend! i love the old stuff too though.

    • @RogerBarraud
      @RogerBarraud Před rokem

      You still can - and it's easier and cheaper than ever now.
      Find your design, get PCB's made, get the parts in, start soldering 🙂

  • @InFamousProductions
    @InFamousProductions Před 2 lety +2

    Oh man, that thing sounds soooooo sweet. It's got it's own sound. what a gem. I'm jealous!!!

  • @TheGramophoneGirl
    @TheGramophoneGirl Před 2 lety +3

    Absolutely love your passion with this. Fun, modern and informative (edit - and very talented)

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin
    @GodmanchesterGoblin Před 2 lety +2

    Loved this video. I still have my original copy of the Formant book. Also, that Practical Electronics with the Minisonic on the front cover was the first issue that I ever bought (November 1974 I think) - that started my life-long interest in Electronics. I have the book on the Transcendant 2000 from ETI some where too. Amazing stuff back in the day.

  • @elBusDriverKC
    @elBusDriverKC Před 2 lety +7

    That is so dang cool. The magazines, the concept, the overall builds are awesome. I'm currently learning electronics the hard way. So far I've learned a backwards cap can / will go BOOM and that SOICs are very picky about voltage directions as well. Apparently they also explode. I've also learned to wear eye protection haha. Great channel!

    • @RogerBarraud
      @RogerBarraud Před rokem

      @monsieurtechnical I had a (reversed :-/) tantalum go BLAM! (complete with small mushroom cloud, I kid you not) when I single-stepped a debugger to the line that turned the volts on. A very weird feeling.

  • @pdm67
    @pdm67 Před 2 lety

    My dad got most of those magazines in the 70s and 80s and built lots of hi-fi projects. My teenage listening would be interrupted by faint sounds of radio Moscow at night. I was a little obsessed with the Elektor Formant synth but never got as far as making it so maybe that’s why I gravitated to modular later in life.

  • @MattBaker1965
    @MattBaker1965 Před 2 lety +2

    Mega ! I, mostly, leaned electronics from the Everyday Electronics in the 70s great to see the old mags popping up again. Thanks for the links.

  • @dolfgoog
    @dolfgoog Před 10 měsíci

    I have an Elektor Formant myself. About twice as big as this one. I own it since the eightees. It's sitting in a closet, patiently waiting for me to bring it back to life...
    By the way, I LOVE it that you gave a very inspiring musical demonstration in this vid!

  • @MartinJunius
    @MartinJunius Před 2 lety +3

    Oh yeah, the Formant. ❤️ Started to build one in my youth, but never made it past a single VCO, VCA, ADSR, NG and a power supply. 😎

    • @RobSchofield
      @RobSchofield Před 2 lety +1

      Same here: couldn't afford a decent trafo but built one VCO, a VCA ADSR, VCF and then ran out of money and enthusiasm 😃

  • @jameshamaker9321
    @jameshamaker9321 Před 2 lety +2

    Thing looks like, it could be, from a musical starship. Love the look, of the module.

  • @RFDeadKey
    @RFDeadKey Před 2 lety +5

    America had something similar called "Heathkit" they had things from Ham radio, and Hifi audio to metering equipment. All of this was built by you. The most well known one was a tube transmitter, the sb-220.

    • @Randrew
      @Randrew Před 2 lety

      America had something *more* similar called "PAiA". We still have it. I'm building several of their 9700 series synth modules.

    • @RFDeadKey
      @RFDeadKey Před 2 lety

      @@Randrew cool, but high voltage is more fun in my opinion.

  • @midinotes
    @midinotes Před 2 lety +1

    Just shows you can build something yourself using common place components, transistors, capacitors, resistors, for probably less than the price of a cheap controller keyboard and make mind blowing analog sounds that put many modern synths costing thousands of pounds to shame! Sounds amazing, especially those filters!

  • @sgsax
    @sgsax Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for sharing the links to the magazine archives. I know nothing about synths but looks like it might be fun to build some of these modules.

  • @MultiArrie
    @MultiArrie Před 2 lety +6

    Read alot of the Dutch version of Elektor called then Elektuur when I was in tradeschool. The most amazing project of the time was the build yourself CD player but the total amount of the components was alot more then a off the shelf player.

    • @nullsmack
      @nullsmack Před 2 lety

      That'd be crazy to see but I don't read dutch :(

    • @nullsmack
      @nullsmack Před 2 lety

      Be interesting to see how they did the actual optics of reading the disc

    • @MultiArrie
      @MultiArrie Před 2 lety +2

      @@nullsmack That was not that interresting, the complete laser assembly complete with loadtray was from Philips. Philips were always helpfull with these kind off projects, those diy dudes could end up as new personel.

    • @klaasj7808
      @klaasj7808 Před 2 lety

      which elektor was that, i own all of them, member since early 70s never seen any cd builder. how the fuck do you make your own goddamn fucking lens

    • @nullsmack
      @nullsmack Před 2 lety

      @@MultiArrie Makes sense for them to offer the assembly and you do the electronics. I can imagine that.

  • @kevincozens6837
    @kevincozens6837 Před 2 lety

    I bought the odd copy of Elektor magazine back in the day when I saw it at a book/magazine seller that carried some specialty and/or foreign ones. I don't remember where exactly I got it but I obtained a copy of the Formant book. I thought about building the modules back then but never did. IIRC, the boards were meant to plug in to card edge connectors on a motherboard. It was a nice modification to bring out a few of the signals to the front panel.

  • @thomasvnl
    @thomasvnl Před 2 lety +1

    So cool how you just know your stuff around these devices Sam. Always get great vibes from your tunes!

  • @c.augustin
    @c.augustin Před 2 lety

    I actually had this Formant booklet (in German, I read the Elektor in my youth and built the "Junior Computer" with extension board, hand-coding a 6502 Forth into it). I used some of the circuits of the Formant in a project (mainly from the VCO, and I think there was a keyboard circuit board that I copied), but it was too expensive for me to build in its entirety. This was trip down memory lane for me!

  • @garch2023
    @garch2023 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant! It's these 1970s / 80s electronics magazines that got me into electronics, and why I chose Electrical Enineering in Aeronautics as my 1st degree! Wow, those mags brings back memories.

  • @pbasswil
    @pbasswil Před 2 lety +1

    That thing sounds damn good. Not as many fancy features as new mono analog synths, but such a fat, satisfying sound.

  • @Veptis
    @Veptis Před 2 lety +1

    I wasn't exposed to this in my childhood. The best I had was junk which I took apart and some science kits with solar cells and like an electrical motor. But nothing this lovely.
    My grandfather worked as a salesman for selling books and science kits to schools and apparently there is some leftovers - but I doubt anything how this scale is included.
    Is there a modern equivalent to getting into electronical engineering today? CZcams videos perhaps?

  • @ghostexits
    @ghostexits Před 2 lety

    Always admired the stark graphic cohesive style of Elektor. They look like a high-end everything-is-by-design type of product with those smart panels and glossy collets. It’s interesting to finally get a glimpse behind the panel and see an equally impressive build using quality din backplanes with pins available for normalized patching schemes. This is really impressive. Someone could make a mil-spec monosynth using these available card designs and some nice rotary switches.

  • @steven-vn9ui
    @steven-vn9ui Před 2 lety +2

    That demo really hit the spot. So much talent

  • @poorkidd
    @poorkidd Před 2 lety +1

    Still my favorite youtube channel! Just want to say thanks for all the great years of sharing!

  • @recceeboy1237
    @recceeboy1237 Před 2 lety

    My buddy and i built our first synth in 1972, used a bontempi organ and micro switchs under the keys. Built the composer and breadboarded eveything. Whole thing was in a surplus metal case, i miss that old frankensynth.

  • @untrust2033
    @untrust2033 Před 2 lety +1

    Woah! Was not expecting it to sound that GOOD! Might have to get back into the diy modular scene!

  • @randymeinderts6234
    @randymeinderts6234 Před 2 lety

    Ha i got one too! Saved it from a dumpster! Including the books etc :) they pop up every now and then over here. They sound amazing!!

  • @MeriaDuck
    @MeriaDuck Před 2 lety

    9:40 great timing, I just plugged something into a socket here in my attic and was confused for a second where that noise came from 🤣

  • @Tiger.Arcade
    @Tiger.Arcade Před 2 lety +2

    I love that unique sound. There’s something oddly Moog about that. Could hear something like that in an old film for sure! Great work!

    • @KarstenJohansson
      @KarstenJohansson Před 2 lety +1

      It definitely had its Jean Michel Jarre moments.

    • @barrycooper9451
      @barrycooper9451 Před 2 lety +1

      Sounds like a Novatron from thirty, forty years previous.

  • @michaelcarey
    @michaelcarey Před 2 lety

    I used to LOVE buying the British electronic magazines back in the late 70s and early 80s. I've still got a few on my shelf. They weren't cheap by the time they landed in Australia but they were well worth the $$$.

  • @Del-Lebo
    @Del-Lebo Před 2 lety

    Happy 55 year old ! My youth in music! Thank you!!! From Walter/Wendy Carlos to Kraftwerk delicious energy tweaking! Thank You

  • @RobSchofield
    @RobSchofield Před 2 lety

    A great demo of a decently-sized Formant. I was always fascinated by this design when it came out, but the one thing that stopped me doing a decent build was the cost of the panels and finding a decent front-panel knob style that wasn't stupidly priced. These days I'd probably do them with 5mm black perspex and etch them with a laser, followed by painting the etch with fluorescent pigment!
    Perhaps it's time to re-visit. Now, where's my Elektor mag collection? Hmm.....

  • @davidb9682
    @davidb9682 Před 2 lety

    Awesome. I remember making the PE Minisonic synth when I was about 15. Tried to fit it into a box far too small, which made it so difficult to wire up. The oscillators never stayed in tune but the noise generator and filter was fun. Wished I'd kept it, but recall taking it all apart to use the components in other magazine projects, like wah wah pedals and noise gates! Great walk down memory lane.

  • @6JM6tube
    @6JM6tube Před 2 lety

    I was a subscriber to Elektor magazine from the late 70's to the 90's. I still have the original book on the "Formant" synthesizer as it was called. It was accompanied by a demo cassette. Many people assembled that synthesizer in a kit, but the polyphony and the presets were going strong, so they brought out the "PolyFormant", with CPU for VCO key-assign and Curtis integrated circuits, it was a style in the basics to the SQ and Korg Polysix of the time. I do not know anyone who has built the "PolyFormant" nor have I seen it in any video on the net. PolyFormant... Someone has this wonder?

  • @Euthymia
    @Euthymia Před 2 lety

    This is great! I also collect vintage electronics magazines and hobbyist books. Last I checked, they don't teach discrete analog and valve electronics at university, so this is all we have to go on. One thing I want to point out: at 5:15 in the video, when you're panning across the back of the units, the PCB on the right has an 8-pin DIP IC that looks like it's not all the way seated in its socket. It could just be that the socket wasn't soldered completely flat to the board, but you might wish to check it to make sure the chip is pushed all the way in

    • @Spookieham
      @Spookieham Před 2 lety

      University doesn't teach electronics and hasn't for years. It's teaches the mathematical theory underpinning everything. As for valves that's really a niche technology now for high power RF amplification which is disapearing more and more.

    • @Euthymia
      @Euthymia Před 2 lety

      @@Spookieham High-power RF and specialty audio. Guitar players still use valve amps

  • @GavinLyonsCreates
    @GavinLyonsCreates Před 2 lety

    Elektor was one of my favourite back in the 90s, they had such seriously awesome projects - real quality! Impressive amount of work to put that back together.

  • @timjmoran
    @timjmoran Před 2 lety

    Wow!! SERiously cool groove at about 13.40..FABtastic sounds as well..very nice.

  • @akedahlback8877
    @akedahlback8877 Před 2 lety

    I built a lot of modules back in the 70's from various monthly DIY mags. Most modules came from the PAiA. It got wrecked when I moved around 1990. Sad.
    I got hooked on synthesizers after seeing a concert with Morton Subotnick back in 1970. I even got to test his Buchla. A few years later I had the chance to play for a whole week on the big Moog Modular.
    But today I can get all those sounds with software in my computer.

  • @rbrooks2007
    @rbrooks2007 Před rokem

    Elektor magazine was great as it was just circuit diagrams and associated PCB layouts which you could copy and use. We had requests for more PJs (Private Jobs) in the PCB department in BBC Engineering than for BBC equipment.

  • @the_cheese
    @the_cheese Před 2 lety

    Back in the '60s and '70s, you could send away for kits to build stuff like your own tube amplifier, FM radio receiver, television set, really any piece of home entertainment electronics. Thanks for another cool video!!

  • @TinyMaths
    @TinyMaths Před 2 lety +1

    Maplin!
    My god, I was sitting there trying to remember the name of the place a couple of days ago and for the life of me couldn't rememer it.
    That's pretty sad that the place I used to visit every so often, that had it's own kind of vibe, sort of quiet and nerdy, has been so erased that I couldn't even remember its name.
    I've largely hated shopping since I was pretty young, but I just loved moseying around my local Maplin store.

  • @reggiep75
    @reggiep75 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice synth, nice size and surprisingly capable for a DIY synth considering the cost of mass produced synths when this originally came out in the 70's.

  • @CallardAndBowser
    @CallardAndBowser Před 2 lety +1

    A centerfold falls out of one of those magazines. Ooopsie ! 🤓

  • @TinkeringJohn
    @TinkeringJohn Před 2 lety

    When I moved from Michigan to Indiana, I left my Polyphony magazines behind. Wish I still had them. I wanted the Paia 4700 synth they advertised on the back cover. I still have a Gnome.

  • @AndyFletcherX31
    @AndyFletcherX31 Před 2 lety +3

    Ah, the sound of the 70s. Analogue synth and the Berlin sound :)

  • @cwxdaf152
    @cwxdaf152 Před 2 lety

    I have the keystep 37 and haven't used it enough, much like all the synth stuff I bought during lockdown, but the thing I love is how easy music can be made. If you work in C and just hit a load of notes in step mode, as long as you hit C as a home note, it sounds awesome.

  • @vivanecrosis
    @vivanecrosis Před 2 lety

    Brilliant 🤍 not seen that kind of analogue stuff for years. So inspired right now! 👍🏻

  • @FlippingTheBits
    @FlippingTheBits Před 2 lety

    Cool to see the first synth I’ve build (and could afford 😉) 40 years ago 😃⚡️👍🏼. Learned a lot by building it, and it still works!

  • @AlexBallMusic
    @AlexBallMusic Před 2 lety

    Sounds surprisingly good! Very interesting.

  • @FritsJalvingh
    @FritsJalvingh Před 2 lety

    That is so great ;) I built that one when I was 16, mostly from spare parts I got from the local Philips dump and from old PCB's.. The only money I had was what I earned with my paper route, and I remember having to save my wages for a month to be able to buy the VCO's transistor pair in their little temperature controlled oven ;)
    The worst is: I actually threw away the thing 20 years ago, not thinking it would become anything coveted again 8-(

  • @cadcncengineeringfabricati3497

    PAiA Synthesizer kits and The Wizard of Ohm (selling ibanez guitar pedals) were my favorite electronic magazine ads from the 70s and 80s. I spent most of my money in the Mcgee Big Speaker Catalog.

  • @asciisynth
    @asciisynth Před 2 lety

    This is used by Ludus Pinsky in the Analog Sessions! Really cool that you got your hands on one. I didn't know what it was called until now. But seeing those Analog Sessions videos is what got me into DIY synthing.

  • @ChurchOfTheHolyMho
    @ChurchOfTheHolyMho Před 2 lety

    Wow. That sounded much better than I expected. Nice. One of these days I'll actually build something like this; been on my "someday" list since I was a kid.

  • @Neffers_UK
    @Neffers_UK Před 2 lety

    This sounds so effing great. Sounds way better than it looks. The dry examples were so nice. The formant filter sounds nice too.

  • @Indict5
    @Indict5 Před 2 lety +1

    The future was yesterday but I am here now!

  • @SharpblueCreative
    @SharpblueCreative Před 2 lety

    That is probably the only time that home build has worked fully and been used properly. I admire your skill with this stuff.

  • @pgoa9187
    @pgoa9187 Před 2 lety

    i have the classical Fromant setup made in 1979. with the magazine as well. i love the deep deep bass - it's a beautiful sounding oldschool synth ... and the rfm really does a good tone shaping. this is a great synth :) happy

  • @acatisfinetoo3018
    @acatisfinetoo3018 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant. love old electronic stuff...they teach you to build everything from scratch. something they simply don't do nowadays.

  • @aurora3655
    @aurora3655 Před 2 lety +4

    electronic engineering is one of the things that has radically changed decade by decadee, yet no one noticed. whilst everything else changed so slowly.

  • @angelog.spicolaiii8021

    Not sure if I'm more impressed with the Formant's sound or how well the BeatStep's functionality work's with it amazing stuff thanx dude

  • @Dudleymiddleton
    @Dudleymiddleton Před rokem

    Seeing maplin in that font on an old magazine = memories of when I was about 15 and full of it.

  • @MrMaxeemum
    @MrMaxeemum Před 2 lety

    I love electronics and spent too much money on magazines over the years, I was always interested in synthesisers and understood each section and how they worked but as for making music from them that was totally alien to me. I'm impressed people use these things to make music but just can't fathom it out myself which is strange because I do have a musical background in that I have played in a brass band since I was about 8 years old (now 50) I need to visit your museum soon.

  • @DickvanSoest
    @DickvanSoest Před 2 lety

    Nice looking back to those magazines! I had access to the Dutch version Elektuur, which also published the Formant synthesizer. Never built it, but I did build my guitar preamp from Elektuur. Good memories!

  • @campbellmorrison8540
    @campbellmorrison8540 Před 2 lety

    When I was a kid I got these magazines and thought it would be great to build one but one day I got access to a MOG synthesizer and frankly I could only make it sound like rubbish so I went cold on the idea. You obviously know what you are doing sounds a hell of a lot better than I could ever do :) So I moved on the the analogue computer series, collected them all and never built it either Doh!

  • @dcorbin5779
    @dcorbin5779 Před 2 lety

    Savage. Gotta love all the old hand drawn diagrams