I remember when i first saw and heard a Formant at a concert of a local rockband in the late 70ies. Nobody owned a synth back then.... It just blew me away. Now i am 63 and i still remember that moment. What an impression this thing left on me....
i remember a friend of mine owning one back then, and he got a call from phil collins, because he owned the other one and he needed a second one for hos europe tour 😅
Besides the other trolls nonsense, I have built mine around 1983. German Elektor Abonnement. That's what we do, or?:) Oh "trolls"? These clowns do not know that Phil Collins is a drummer. And in now way some kind of roady, that organizes equipment for his keyboarder.
Yeah that drives me crazy. I own the only other hand-wired analog telephone left in the UK and a malfunctioning Phil Collins calls me on it sometimes. Usually I can't tell what he's saying because of all the gated reverb, but you can tell it's him. I have to WhatsApp Mike Rutherford and tell him the Phil Collins is broken again, and I guess they switch over the spare. Sadly it looks like they're down to the last working Phil Collins now. When you look at how poorly built they are, we're lucky there's any left around at all. I'm glad that someone's been maintaining the last working Phil Collins and using it make music. It would be said if Phil Collins was just left to rust in the corner of some museum and no one ever took it out and played with it.
@@johnbehan1526 that sounds so typical. we never preserve our real history. we just let our phil collins' rot. really explains the youth of today. thank you for sharing!
Sam, Just wanted to thank you. You bring joy to the Internet. I know I am not alone in feeling this way. Thank you for your indomitable spirit and exuberance in creating electronic splendor!
I don’t think you know just how clever you actually are, Sir. Which is often the case. As an ‘old dog’ technical engineer myself, you give me hope for the future of ‘us’ and young people.👍🙂
I say the same too. 61yr engineer now retired, grew up with Elektor and all those old school electronics mags. Could listen to this all day taking me back to the 70's & 80's. Ty for rescuing all those bits and making them live again; the world before computers made things boring LOL. Well done :o)
Hello, Thank you for your video which encourages me to restore my “Formant” after almost 50 years ! It's a shame that I don't understand much English and you speak very quickly ! I'm French and I translated this answer using Google.... Hello, from France!
Well done Sam, another incredible piece of work. You're a hero. Thank you for sharing it with us. Your fight with the keyboard contacts reminded me, some 50 years ago I glued 49 of them onto part of a salvaged wooden piano keyboard for my first diy synth. Memories of tweaking the gold plated wires to get the action right.....
You, sir, have the patience of a Saint! Building all of that and successfully connecting all of that stuff and actually making it work, is magic. KUDOS!
Worth headphones 🎧or nice speakers to hear the full chonk. The separate filters for each voice makes it sound so much bigger, like fancy complex chorus. The LFOs movement helps keep the chonk light on its chonky feet too
Top stuff Sam! Hats off to yotfor building the proper backplane for this, it's really an integral part of the Formant as an instrument. Its sure got the chonk in great chunks!
Cool... i read the Elektor-Magazines dealing with the Formant from the beginning. My father bought Elektor-magazines from time to time, and one of the magazines showed the thing about the Formant. I could see all the magazines in our town-bibliothek, and learned by reading what synthesizers are about... I could not afford one, i was 14 years of age in 1977, and a synth-kit was about 1700 Deutschmarks, so forget it, i had 100 or 200... I was able to play a Formant somewhen in the beginning 80s, it was in Dortmund on the Hobbytronic, Elektor had a booth there, and i was able to patch the synth and create nice and ugly tones, just learning how to do this by reading the build instructions :) Was mach fun, but i did never buy a Formant. Today, at the age of 60, i have had some synths, best known is the waldorf microwave, and all are dead. I will by a Behringer model-D soon, to get a bit into the sound a formant could offer ...
I am IN LOVE!!!!!! There is just SO MUCH that is TOP NOTCH about this beauty!!! When you add the rest of the OSC's I hope you have another one of those resonant filters to add to it.. I think THAT is what is giving it such a phat crunchy sound! And when you put it in stereo I started to DROOL!!! Maybe that's what you should name it. Drool :) LOL !!
Jeesh thats a beast of a machine. I was just starting to nod off (sorry), then you started using it! Wowza, amazing! Brings me right back to the seventies/eighties when I used to get Elektor and send off to Maplin for a list of parts (took ten days usually), then copper etched boards and soldered away to my hearts content! Your enthusiasm, relentless optomism and skill is an example to us all! Thank you thank you thank you!
I have to comment here that this is (for someone who has been into sysnths since the late eighties) absolutely mindblowing. To think this stuff came from a magazine, and my god, the depth to the sounds once you hardwired the modules in. Amazing! Thankyou!
Actually, now that I've thought about it: It would have been cool to add another keyboard and treat each voice like a division of an organ. The left side with three oscillators could have been like the Great, or main division and the right side with only one oscillator could've been like the Swell. That way, you could play two different musical lines coming through with different timbres from each "division". But it sounds awesome the way it is now, kind of like a CS80! I use Surge XT, a plugin that works exactly this way with Scene A and B.
you can have polyphonic synths but sometimes monophonic is superior. This is a mono synth. It was designed as one and it has certain advantages. No point making a Frankenstein. That's what you build new synths for
Awesome. Built a PAIA system in the late 60's, landfill now😢 Moved on to an Apple II system, still somewhere, must dig it out. Feel your pain on the wonky kybd switches, same issue on my Taurus peddles, swapped those for relays,all good now. Enjoy your content.
I built and played both the Maplin 3800 and Transcendent 2000 synths way back in the 70s. The 3800 was a beast of a multiple circuit board design, while the 2000 was a single motherboard job. Both were amazing, although they had a tendency to drift out of tune. Had the same problem as you - had to leave the keyboard unscrewed, because a bit of over enthusiastic playing could leave one of the contacts 'stuck' and I had to get back inside to free it up. My university room was a chaotic jumble of parts, boards, integrated circuits and bits and pieces. My playing? I was useless. But the sounds were great!
For DIY junk it's damn good....when you turned the bass up I immediately went ...Ooooh.....when you went stereo I almost melted....now currently studying the files, doubt I'll be able to build it but I can dream
That is freakin awesome! Didn't expect much when you started this project, but I have to hand it to the designers (and your mad restoration skills), this thing rocks! :)
I applaud the incredible amount of effort you put into this project. Truly a labour of love. Well done 👍 Sounds amazing too! God bless Elektor Magazine. 💜 Oh, how I miss doing hobby electronics in the 70's & 80s, when the logic signal switching speeds were slow, the components were still big enough to see with the naked eye, and before all circuits included a computer. 😆
This is essentially what a Synthesizer is really all about.....The combining of parts into a connected whole, that is, the combining of parts of a sound into a connected whole sound.
Great stuff, I have no idea about synths but i love seeing all your projects on the go. We visited the museum last month and saw you rushing around fixing stuff, had a blast in there, bought the T shirt and we will be back in the future. Carry on the wobbly wibbly good work young man. ;)
Love the sound of this synth. It's bugging the hell out of me what synth it sounds like though - it reminds me of the score on the film "Dark Star" but I can't for the life of me remember which synth was used.
quick look and listen to the theme tune. my bet is a moog modular or an arp 2600 as a broad guess from what was popular with american composers of the time. but who knows! i wasn't aware of the film, but it came out 4 years before the release of the formant so just a guess!
@@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER I have an ARP 2600 and I don't think it's that (though it might be as it is close) but then they probably set it up better than I ever could. I think it may just be my memory dicking around with me as you're likely right, as it is most likely a Moog or an ARP, though I wonder if it's the big old Moog modular I'm thinking of?
I'm glad you got around to building this as it was intended - and that it turns out to sound pretty good indeed. Tripling the voices will be delightfully monstrous, if all goes well.
I imagine the original owner of that one module watching this video out of nostalgia, seeing his old module and the culprit of the upside down transistor and thinking "Ah, that's why".
A lot of character to that synth. Amazing how good you are at this stuff... I'm still struggling after many years! Maybe do a video about how you learned so much? Would be killer if you could get a more direct recording of your gear at some point. Camera mics suck no matter what. Great vid man, thanks!
Excellent work Sam. That synth sounds great. I was a subscriber to Elektor when this was featured, and I thought about building it, but then realised that I would never have had the skill to play it.
You really give me a lot of inspiration to try new things. I think you're quite clever, but when you're fiddling about, I can see, "oh, there's a logic and a (semi-)consistency to these things. I could do that if I took a little bit of time to figure it out." Your DIY ethic has already translated into some successful minor projects around the house, as I think about it.
Thank you for this Sam - it's a brilliant video and the sounds this synth (now) makes are gorgeous. I'm technical enough to have soldered an Atari Punk Console synth kit and musical enough to play some tunes on a guitar and I have to say that this level of detail is fascinating to watch. :)
Fantastic sounding synth ,well done for getting it to work,pity no one does a kit of this ,i had a Kimber Allen keyboard which was just as bad as those springy things are awful ,
Love the case building segments. Synth-DIY needs more guidance in this area. If you're taking requests, would love some aluminum panel brake-bending and metal enclosure making footage.
Sure, it may look neater than cable ties (although this is the eye of beholder thing), but with cable ties - you can access the individual module's wires separately without needing to cut and ruin the entire string. I began using reusable cable ties for all my electronics projects. Even though they're a bit more expensive, they're more environmentally friendly. But yeah, Formant's got wicked bass, don't even need the subwoofer for live jams and performances.
All those telephone/uniselector projects have clearly been great back-wiring practice :) nice lace-up job too. That's a pretty nice bi-timbral three-oscillator setup. I like the resonators especially, they're a lot like the ones in the recent Korg reissue. But presumably you could buy an RFM module separately to connect to any other synth setup as well!
NAME A DIY SYNTH
Elfor 🤓
Magnuminous
The Thrillmarillion.
Crowminius.
Got the bare board working, still working on a case.
The voltage voyager.
I remember when i first saw and heard a Formant at a concert of a local rockband in the late 70ies. Nobody owned a synth back then.... It just blew me away. Now i am 63 and i still remember that moment. What an impression this thing left on me....
i remember a friend of mine owning one back then, and he got a call from phil collins, because he owned the other one and he needed a second one for hos europe tour 😅
i had a buddy growing up. he owned the only other phil collins at the time. he was always getting calls when the original was acting up. wild, man.
Besides the other trolls nonsense, I have built mine around 1983. German Elektor Abonnement. That's what we do, or?:)
Oh "trolls"? These clowns do not know that Phil Collins is a drummer. And in now way some kind of roady, that organizes equipment for his keyboarder.
Yeah that drives me crazy. I own the only other hand-wired analog telephone left in the UK and a malfunctioning Phil Collins calls me on it sometimes. Usually I can't tell what he's saying because of all the gated reverb, but you can tell it's him.
I have to WhatsApp Mike Rutherford and tell him the Phil Collins is broken again, and I guess they switch over the spare.
Sadly it looks like they're down to the last working Phil Collins now. When you look at how poorly built they are, we're lucky there's any left around at all. I'm glad that someone's been maintaining the last working Phil Collins and using it make music. It would be said if Phil Collins was just left to rust in the corner of some museum and no one ever took it out and played with it.
@@johnbehan1526 that sounds so typical. we never preserve our real history. we just let our phil collins' rot. really explains the youth of today. thank you for sharing!
Sam,
Just wanted to thank you. You bring joy to the Internet. I know I am not alone in feeling this way. Thank you for your indomitable spirit and exuberance in creating electronic splendor!
I don’t think you know just how clever you actually are, Sir. Which is often the case. As an ‘old dog’ technical engineer myself, you give me hope for the future of ‘us’ and young people.👍🙂
I'm too dumb to know when not to try something that's all I know :Dhaha
I say the same too. 61yr engineer now retired, grew up with Elektor and all those old school electronics mags. Could listen to this all day taking me back to the 70's & 80's. Ty for rescuing all those bits and making them live again; the world before computers made things boring LOL. Well done :o)
OMG. My dad built that one, and I still have it. Not sure it runs still, but it was great learning about formant synthesis.
Fix it!
love that you never shy away from a huge challenge, i havent had that drive since when i was a teen!
Hello,
Thank you for your video which encourages me to restore my “Formant” after almost 50 years ! It's a shame that I don't understand much English and you speak very quickly ! I'm French and I translated this answer using Google....
Hello, from France!
Or sell it me.
Love to see someone giving the Formant some appreciation. Surprisingly little Formant on the web.
Now I really need to go ahead and restore my own.
Well done Sam, another incredible piece of work. You're a hero. Thank you for sharing it with us. Your fight with the keyboard contacts reminded me, some 50 years ago I glued 49 of them onto part of a salvaged wooden piano keyboard for my first diy synth. Memories of tweaking the gold plated wires to get the action right.....
You, sir, have the patience of a Saint!
Building all of that and successfully connecting all of that stuff and actually making it work, is magic.
KUDOS!
p.s. LOVE your enthusiasm!!!
Worth headphones 🎧or nice speakers to hear the full chonk.
The separate filters for each voice makes it sound so much bigger, like fancy complex chorus.
The LFOs movement helps keep the chonk light on its chonky feet too
Top stuff Sam! Hats off to yotfor building the proper backplane for this, it's really an integral part of the Formant as an instrument.
Its sure got the chonk in great chunks!
"the wobbles, the wiggles, the wooblies"
LMNC - 2024
haha!
_All perfectly technical terms_
beauty on the wax lacing, matches the aesthetic for this synth very well.
Cool... i read the Elektor-Magazines dealing with the Formant from the beginning. My father bought Elektor-magazines from time to time, and one of the magazines showed the thing about the Formant. I could see all the magazines in our town-bibliothek, and learned by reading what synthesizers are about...
I could not afford one, i was 14 years of age in 1977, and a synth-kit was about 1700 Deutschmarks, so forget it, i had 100 or 200...
I was able to play a Formant somewhen in the beginning 80s, it was in Dortmund on the Hobbytronic, Elektor had a booth there, and i was able to patch the synth and create nice and ugly tones, just learning how to do this by reading the build instructions :) Was mach fun, but i did never buy a Formant.
Today, at the age of 60, i have had some synths, best known is the waldorf microwave, and all are dead.
I will by a Behringer model-D soon, to get a bit into the sound a formant could offer ...
What a beautifully awesome analogue tone this has! Especially the dual/stereo version. This channel is the pinnacle of punk nerdery :)
5:06 gotta love aluminium angle ❤ sooo useful for studio projects 👍
I am IN LOVE!!!!!! There is just SO MUCH that is TOP NOTCH about this beauty!!!
When you add the rest of the OSC's I hope you have another one of those resonant filters to add to it.. I think THAT is what is giving it such a phat crunchy sound! And when you put it in stereo I started to DROOL!!! Maybe that's what you should name it. Drool :) LOL !!
great fat sounds. That thing sounds huge! Great vid!
Jeesh thats a beast of a machine. I was just starting to nod off (sorry), then you started using it! Wowza, amazing! Brings me right back to the seventies/eighties when I used to get Elektor and send off to Maplin for a list of parts (took ten days usually), then copper etched boards and soldered away to my hearts content! Your enthusiasm, relentless optomism and skill is an example to us all! Thank you thank you thank you!
It was really satisfying watching that pile of parts turn into a nice synth, and it sounds great too!
Those oscillators & filter had a throbbing gristle vibe to them... excellent stuff
What a luscious sound. Sounds so thick.
I have no idea about Synths, and haven't a musical bone in my body but Im absolutely fascinated by this and loved your video. Subscriber for life.
Cant beat your workflow man. Epitome of synthesizer scrapheap challenge. Shouldnt work? Will make it work. Pure wizard
This synth sounds super sick
That moment at 27:18 when you can see the song idea forming in your head is awesome :D It sounds so good!
I have to comment here that this is (for someone who has been into sysnths since the late eighties) absolutely mindblowing. To think this stuff came from a magazine, and my god, the depth to the sounds once you hardwired the modules in. Amazing! Thankyou!
Actually, now that I've thought about it: It would have been cool to add another keyboard and treat each voice like a division of an organ. The left side with three oscillators could have been like the Great, or main division and the right side with only one oscillator could've been like the Swell. That way, you could play two different musical lines coming through with different timbres from each "division". But it sounds awesome the way it is now, kind of like a CS80! I use Surge XT, a plugin that works exactly this way with Scene A and B.
you can have polyphonic synths but sometimes monophonic is superior. This is a mono synth. It was designed as one and it has certain advantages. No point making a Frankenstein. That's what you build new synths for
There is a switch at the back however so using 2 keyboards they control each side seperately I guess that's what you wanted
I love this synth just for the typeface that was used. 😍
The wax lacing!! Oh man! The loomage! Favorite part for me 🎉
That's one of the best sounding synths I've ever heard (in my humble opinion).
Christ I want one
That sounds freaking incredible
Goddamn that's nice. The EUROSTILE extended typeface really seals the deal. Excellent werk.
That is one sweet sounding modular!
Thats cool that you are bringing all this stuff back to life.
that LFO wobble is just sublime
you brought me into getting a synth and im super love it, your vids are amazing, ty so much for all you do!
Wood, saws and glue. The most mental synth video ❤
Awesome. Built a PAIA system in the late 60's, landfill now😢
Moved on to an Apple II system, still somewhere, must dig it out. Feel your pain on the wonky kybd switches, same issue on my Taurus peddles, swapped those for relays,all good now.
Enjoy your content.
The colour of t he case blends well with the Joan's organ (brown wood☺)
Interesting video 2x👍👍
It sounds AWESOME through headphones.
What an odyssey - and what a joyous result! Kudos and congrats!
Bloody amazing. You're a legend.
I built and played both the Maplin 3800 and Transcendent 2000 synths way back in the 70s. The 3800 was a beast of a multiple circuit board design, while the 2000 was a single motherboard job. Both were amazing, although they had a tendency to drift out of tune. Had the same problem as you - had to leave the keyboard unscrewed, because a bit of over enthusiastic playing could leave one of the contacts 'stuck' and I had to get back inside to free it up. My university room was a chaotic jumble of parts, boards, integrated circuits and bits and pieces. My playing? I was useless. But the sounds were great!
Love the off-white/pale-grey knobs, my Super 6 has those too 👍
For DIY junk it's damn good....when you turned the bass up I immediately went ...Ooooh.....when you went stereo I almost melted....now currently studying the files, doubt I'll be able to build it but I can dream
Around 5:40 using the saw handle as a square - not seen that before, very good.
I’ve never seen wax laced cables before but that is neat. And less plastic products. Cheers for the infoze.
This thing is crazy! Love it, can't wait to see some more vids. I wanna see Alex Ball do a vid on this company/synth now and mess w/it!
That is freakin awesome! Didn't expect much when you started this project, but I have to hand it to the designers (and your mad restoration skills), this thing rocks! :)
I applaud the incredible amount of effort you put into this project. Truly a labour of love. Well done 👍
Sounds amazing too! God bless Elektor Magazine. 💜
Oh, how I miss doing hobby electronics in the 70's & 80s, when the logic signal switching speeds were slow, the components were still big enough to see with the naked eye, and before all circuits included a computer. 😆
This is essentially what a Synthesizer is really all about.....The combining of parts into a connected whole, that is, the combining of parts of a sound into a connected whole sound.
Nicely done sir, Good on Ya ! 😁
This was my first synthesizer! I built it myself and still have it today.
Oh man that looks and sounds SO frickin FUN!!!
That IS a really sweet synth. Really wish we got those magazines in the U.S. when I was going to electronics tech school...
Ooh, I like the sounds of this synth very much indeed!
Great stuff, I have no idea about synths but i love seeing all your projects on the go. We visited the museum last month and saw you rushing around fixing stuff, had a blast in there, bought the T shirt and we will be back in the future.
Carry on the wobbly wibbly good work young man. ;)
Great video Sam. I'm a very happy Formant owner, and doubt I'll ever let it go. Love the channel and your approach. ❣
Incredible build. When Sam drops a project like this, you know it is going to be amazing before it even starts. Zero disappointment here!
Superb job. Looks and sounds beautiful. Really great video. Wax lacing reminds me of when I used to wire up telephone exchanges 😅
Very nice Sam, I could have easily watched for another half hour.
Great work Sam, that is already sounding awesome even with a few non working bits! Thanks for sharing 🙂😎🤓❤
Have all your albums in my Apple playlist... AWESOME!!!!
I'm always amazed how much work goes into every video. Very cool synth!
That is a beautiful sounding synth! Might be my favourite that you've shown
Love the sound of this synth. It's bugging the hell out of me what synth it sounds like though - it reminds me of the score on the film "Dark Star" but I can't for the life of me remember which synth was used.
quick look and listen to the theme tune. my bet is a moog modular or an arp 2600 as a broad guess from what was popular with american composers of the time. but who knows! i wasn't aware of the film, but it came out 4 years before the release of the formant so just a guess!
@@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER I have an ARP 2600 and I don't think it's that (though it might be as it is close) but then they probably set it up better than I ever could.
I think it may just be my memory dicking around with me as you're likely right, as it is most likely a Moog or an ARP, though I wonder if it's the big old Moog modular I'm thinking of?
EMS VCS3? I remember reading years ago that it was used by Carpenter for parts of that... he might've got a sequencer from arp or sequential?
Love the sound... made me search my old records.
I'm glad you got around to building this as it was intended - and that it turns out to sound pretty good indeed. Tripling the voices will be delightfully monstrous, if all goes well.
So incredible watching this come together! And what an amazing, phat sound!! i love a semi-modular; best of both worlds!!!
I love the awesome job you did on the knobs.
Outstanding, you fine bloke. Super well done.
I imagine the original owner of that one module watching this video out of nostalgia, seeing his old module and the culprit of the upside down transistor and thinking "Ah, that's why".
A lot of character to that synth. Amazing how good you are at this stuff... I'm still struggling after many years! Maybe do a video about how you learned so much? Would be killer if you could get a more direct recording of your gear at some point. Camera mics suck no matter what. Great vid man, thanks!
Excellent work Sam. That synth sounds great. I was a subscriber to Elektor when this was featured, and I thought about building it, but then realised that I would never have had the skill to play it.
You really give me a lot of inspiration to try new things. I think you're quite clever, but when you're fiddling about, I can see, "oh, there's a logic and a (semi-)consistency to these things. I could do that if I took a little bit of time to figure it out." Your DIY ethic has already translated into some successful minor projects around the house, as I think about it.
Well some of electronic musics best bands built their own diy synths.
Thing sounds good. Good job
Thank you for this Sam - it's a brilliant video and the sounds this synth (now) makes are gorgeous. I'm technical enough to have soldered an Atari Punk Console synth kit and musical enough to play some tunes on a guitar and I have to say that this level of detail is fascinating to watch. :)
Elektor is gonna have some new sales!! Hope he can keep up!!!
Ear candy. Pure and simple. Extraordinary.
Sam, you are a bloody electronic Genius! That is one incredible synth for sure, Much Respect to you my friend!
Curlywurly brown wood stain. Niiiiiiccccceeeeee.
By default, I'd have no idea what to do with an instrument such as that.......... but one you get it all going it sounds extra cool.
Enjoy your music and videos, I always learning something new, any advice on what would be a good starter synthesizer to use and add to my music please
Definitely a fair bit of chonk!! I appreciate the scientific terms. 😅 Excellent work, Sam!!
That thing really does have some great sounds, such a cool video!
Reminds me of when Markus Fuller set out to fix a Maplin synthesizer, built from a kit I guess.
Somewhere i have a box of electronic bits for this and a few others,must find them someone would like them i am sure,nice vid thank you
Fantastic sounding synth ,well done for getting it to work,pity no one does a kit of this ,i had a Kimber Allen keyboard which was just as bad as those springy things are awful ,
wow.... I want to make one now.... that is an awesome sound!!!!
Put oscilloscope in xy mode to visualise effects :)
Wow thats very beefy nice
Love the case building segments. Synth-DIY needs more guidance in this area. If you're taking requests, would love some aluminum panel brake-bending and metal enclosure making footage.
Sure, it may look neater than cable ties (although this is the eye of beholder thing), but with cable ties - you can access the individual module's wires separately without needing to cut and ruin the entire string. I began using reusable cable ties for all my electronics projects. Even though they're a bit more expensive, they're more environmentally friendly. But yeah, Formant's got wicked bass, don't even need the subwoofer for live jams and performances.
Sounds PHAT as... to me, great job Sam! I think you were channeling Keith Emerson at some points. 🎶💯😜
Nice one with the wax lacing my dude, a brilliant look for this machine. I love that you take the time for that kind of stuff.
That is a meaty synth! It's crazy such a good sound came out of such a mess of DIY components.
All those telephone/uniselector projects have clearly been great back-wiring practice :) nice lace-up job too.
That's a pretty nice bi-timbral three-oscillator setup. I like the resonators especially, they're a lot like the ones in the recent Korg reissue. But presumably you could buy an RFM module separately to connect to any other synth setup as well!
Thanks