mini moog

Moog Mini

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It is perhaps not possible to write up who used this synth, the list is endless.

Popular as it was about the first non-modular synthesiser, built as a fixed

configuration of the racked or modular predecessors.

Best known at the time on Pink Floyd 'Dark Side of the Moon' and other albums.

Rick Wakefield used it as did Jean Michel Jarre. Wakefield could actually

predict the sound it would make by just looking at the settings, nice to be

able to do if a little unproductive but it went to show how this was treated

as an instrument in its own right. It takes a bit of work to get the same sweet,

rich sounds out of the emulation, but it can be done with suitable tweaking.

The original was monophonic, although a polyphonic version was eventually made

after Moog sold the company - the MultiMoog. This emulation is more comparable

to that model as the sound is a bit thinner and can be polyphonic. The design

of this synth became the pole bearer for the following generations: it had

three oscillators, one of which could become a low frequency modulator. They

were fed into a mixer with a noise source, and were then fed into a filter

with 2 envelope generators to contour the wave. Modulation capabilities were

not extensive, but interestingly enough it did have a frequency modulation (FM)

capability, eventually used by Yamaha to revolutionise the synthesiser market

starting the downfall of analogue synthesis twenty years later.

All the analogue synths were temperature sensitive. It was not unusual for the

synths to 'detune' between sound test and performance as the evening set in.

To overcome this they could optionally produce a stable A-440Hz signal for

tuning the oscillators manually - eventually being an automated option in the

newer synths. Whilst this digital version has stable frequency generation the

A-440 is still employed here for the sake of it.

Modifiers and mod routing are relatively simple, Osc-3 and noise can be mixed,

and this signal routed to the oscillator 1 and 2 frequency or filter cutoff.

The synth had 5 main stages as follows:

Control:

Master tuning: up/down one note.

Glide: (glissando, portamento). The rate at which one key will change its

frequency to the next played key, 0 to 30 seconds.

Mod: source changes between Osc-3 and noise.

Release: The envelope generators had only 3 parameters. This governed whether

a key would release immediately or would use Decay to die out.

Multi: Controls whether the envelope will retrigger for each new keypress.

Oscillators:

There are three oscillators. One and two are keyboard tracking, the third

can be decoupled and used as an LFO modulation source.

Oscillator 1:

Octave step from 32' to 1'.

Waveform selection: sine/square/pulse/ramp/tri/splitramp

Mod: controls whether Osc-3/noise modulates frequency

Oscillator 2:

Octave step from 32' to 1'.

Fine tune up/down 7 half notes.

Waveform selection: sine/square/pulse/ramp/tri/splitramp

Mod: controls whether Osc-3/noise modulates frequency

Oscillator 3:

Octave step from 32' to 1'.

Fine tune up/down 7 half notes.

Waveform selection: sine/square/pulse/ramp/tri/splitramp

LFO switch to decouple from keytracking.

Mixer:

Gain levels for Oscillator 1/2/3

Mixing of the external input source into filter

Noise source with white/pink switch.

Note: The level at which Osc-3 and noise modulates sound depends on its

gain here, similarly the noise. The modulator mix also affects this, but

allows Osc-3 to mod as well as sound. The modwheel also affect depth.

Filter:

Cutoff frequency

Emphasis (affects Q and resonance of filter).

Contour: defines how much the filter envelope affects cutoff.

Mod - Keyboard tracking of cutoff frequency.

Mod - Osc-3/noise modulation of cutoff frequency.

Contour:

The synth had two envelope generators, one for the filter and one for the

amplifier. Release is affected by the release switch. If off the the sound

will release at the rate of the decay control.

Attack: initial ramp up of gain.

Decay: fall off of maximum signal down to:

Sustain: gain level for constant key-on level.

Key: Touch sensitivity of amplifier envelope.

Improvements to the Mini would be some better oscillator waveforms, plus an

alternative filter as this is a relatively simple synthesiser and could do

with a warmer filter (this was fixed with integration of the houvillanen filters

although the do consume a lot of CPU to do it).

The Output selection has a Midi channel up/down selector and memory selector.

To read a memory either use the up/down arrows to go to the next available

memory, or type in a 3 digit number on the telephone keypad and press 'L' for

load or 'S' for save.

As of release 0.20.5 Vasiliy Basic contributed his Mini memory banks and they

are now a part of the distribution:

Programs for Bristol's "Mini" (from 50 to 86 PRG)

List of programs:

-Melodic-

50 - Trumpet

51 - Cello

52 - Guitar 1

53 - Guitar 2

54 - Fingered Bass

55 - Picked Bass

56 - Harmonica

57 - Accordion

58 - Tango Accordion

59 - Super Accordion

60 - Piano

61 - Dark Organ

62 - Flute

63 - Music Box

64 - Glass Xylo

65 - Glass Pad

66 - Acid Bass

-Drums-

67 - Bass Drum 1

68 - Bass Drum 2

69 - Bass Drum 3

70 - Bass Drum 4

71 - Tom

72 - Snare 1

73 - Snare 2

74 - Snare 3

75 - Snare 4

76 - Cl HH 1

77 - Op HH 1

78 - Crash Cym 1

79 - Crash Cym 2

80 - Cl HH 2

81 - Op HH 2

-FX-

82 - Sea Shore

83 - Helicopter 1

84 - Helicopter 2

85 - Bird Tweet

86 - Birds Tweet