As mentioned, any ad revenue from this video will be doubled and donated to the Alan R Pearlman Foundation. If you wish to chuck in a donation, this would be greatly appreciated: alanrpearlmanfoundation.org/donate/
Hello Alex: I am so old that I remember very clearly when Rick Wakeman released his vinyl album "The Six Wives of Henry the Eighth". Not only did the radio announcer play the entire album, he also read off the entire list of equipment that Rick played. (Yes, it was that kind of radio program.) To a young fellow growing up in the wilds of the Australian suburbs, the sounds that 2600 and it's ilk produced were pure magic. They still are pure magic. Keep up the wonderful work.
@@SpikesStudio3 Hello Michael: Yes, I also have the original album. I also went to see Rick Wakeman when he came to Australia on the Journey to Center of the Earth tour in about 1974. There were three great British keyboard players in that era, Keith Emerson, Rick Wakeman and Steve Winwood. I've been able to see the last two of those play. Stay well and safe.
I love that you actually play music on the synths that you discuss, rather than just demo individual sounds. It really shows what these awesome instruments are capable of!
As always Alex, Beautiful and brilliant video! The ARP 2600 has been the mainstay centerpiece in my studio and music for going on 35 years. I feel fortunate that it’s how I started my winding journey through the wilderness of synthesis. Much love to you maestro! ❤️
Hey Lisa! Loved your performance in the Symposium with the Mellotrons, Moogs and the 2600. Hugely dynamic and expressive as ever! 35 years - wow! Doesn't that say a lot about how enduring an instrument it is! Things come and go, but not the 2600.
Great video Alex! Thank you so much! I grew up as a teenager playing with ARP synths in a local music store in North Attleboro MA. At the time I had no idea that the ARP headquarters were so very close by. I still vividly remember lusting after this ARP Odyssey and Axxe synths! :)
Love or hate Behringer, their 2600 clone has put this synth in the hands of the hobby synthesist. The 2600 is as good today as it ever was but even more accessable. Thank you Alan R Pearlman and all those at ARP who created this amazing instrument.
I enjoyed my original ARP Odyssey white face from the summer of 1973 to around 1995 when it was pretty much dead and I sold it to a repair genius in California. I used it in weekend bands and in my tiny home studio. Now I have twin Behringer Odysseys above a Nord C1 and a Behringer 2600 racked vertically on some coffee cans behind one of the Odysseys. (The Odyssey is actually wider than the 2600.) The rig lights up like the bridge of the Enterprise.
Great video as always Alex. I remember seeing these on sale when they were first introduced. It seems you have as many synth t-shirts as synths! This was a great demo of a versatile machine and as always very rewarding to watch given the amount of work you put in. Thanks!
@@AlexBallMusic Enjoy it while you can! I used to collect Kraftwerk T-Shirts. As you get older, its polo shirts I am afraid unless you have an excessively athletic build! BTW you should do a studio tour - I'd be interested to know what your arsenal includes!
wow what cool memories. this was legend and still is. back then, I built an "Elektor Formant" (you know that one?) together with a comrade, -- 6 oscillators, two independent output channels, 1 ladder fiilter (not in the DIY package of course), one state variable filter, 3 LFOs, 3 ADSRs etc. a number of severe modifications: keyboard needs only ONE contact for gate and CV (what a quagmire this was with 2 contacts) !! default hard-wiring of everything plus jacks, +/- 1,2,3,4 octave switches, delayed vibrato, pitch bender, some more keyboard features. played ~40 gigs with it! so I'm super glad every time, when someone comes up with a competent vintage synth video.
The music department at the college I was attending bought a grey 2600 in 1971. It was great to get hands on such an iconic synth so early. I have a couple of vst emulations... Arturia's 2600 is the best I have. Great demo, thanks! Subscribing.
Donated & plugged this video. Now I know why my KARP Odyssey Module has been calling to me all week! Nice work on those classic patches 👌 Good work all around, Alex. Cheers!
The Arp 2600 has always been my favourite synth. I always liked that you had to get involved in using it and learning about it to unlock its possibilities. The best instruments do that.
There are so many examples of the ARP 2600 in legendary albums, movies, etc. Among my personal favorites prominently featuring this synth are the albums Snivilisation (1994) and In Sides (1996) by Orbital. Paul Hartnoll LOVES the ARP 2600.
After stumbling on a couple of sounds on my Behringer 2600, I'm convinced that many sounds on the Six million Dollar Man, including the famous bionic eye effect, was done on the 2600, and the scene where Col Steve Austin fights the John Saxon robot, the sample and hold is used to convey a computer brain in the robot. Very informative video Alex.
Did you talk about the ARP Quadra already? A friend of mine had one. Worked very well on the stage, it had a computer algorithm to tune/recalibrate all its analog modules, though it took a couple of minutes.
When the base keys kicked in during the first tune you played, it really reminded me of music from Final Fantasy 7... And I loved it!! Awsome video Alex. Thank you!
Alex, first comment but had to express that your infectious passion for the music and these old machines continues to inspire me with every new video, thanks, appreciate it dude.❤️
that outro jam Alex!!!! more of that please.. i would love to hear more of the experimental stuff u make.. i do love the 80s stuff you seem to usually do but show us ur wild side more please hehe x
Awesome, yeah I love using the duo-phonic keyboard for 2 note paraphony. Mine is a Korg reissue and it one of my favs in my studio! Thanks Alex for the update on the foundation as well, glad to hear they're doing big things!
Hey Marshal. Glad you got the reissue, that's great. I would have loved one but, hey ho. Foundation - yeah, great to see it coming together despite the covid hold ups. Would love to get over to Boston to see them one day
Great video. I'll tell you why. Not only informative but instructional. I have a Behringer 2600 and it has become probably my favourite mono(duo) synth. I am definitely going to try some of your patches.
Hey Alex - great stuff! Really like your videos exploring the history of synth companies, too. I lusted after a 2600 back in the day. Now relatively happy with the Behringer 2600 which has scratched an itch 😀
The soft-synths are fine for patch libraries but you just cannot compare with the immediacy of having hands on experience. Also being able to patch in and out to other gear :-)
True but depends on how you approach the production task. I'd rather crack on and not have a dial-in each sound. No right or wrong way though, just what you prefer i guess
Listening to Alex jamming, I could swear I knew some bits and pieces from somewhere. And then, bingo! Depeche Mode "Speak & Spell" and Soft Cell's "Non Stop Erotic Cabaret". Daniel Miller used his own 2600 on both of these albums and he still owns that very ARP according to a very recent interview. Best wishes from Poland, Mr Ball! 😎
@@AlexBallMusic There is a very good synth shop here in San Francisco, called Robotspeak. Every time I stop in, I ask him to power up his Korg 2600 clone, but he won't touch it. He just wants to sell it for the god-knows-what price! I can't keep my hands off of it! However, I am exploring with my own Behringer BARP 2600.
Great overview of this… think you could get your hands on the new Korg ARP 2600 mini version and do a sound comparison? As always a fun vid with great jams…
I have the Behringer, which has both filters, and I can’t tell the difference between the 2 filters. Maybe because I’m as old as the original 2600 and top end is not high on my list of things I still hear. It’s a lovely design and gives me all the 'modular' goodness I need.
I have an original Odyssey mkII with the earlier filter and the Avatar with the later and it sounds like someone opens the filter when you switch from the latter to the former. It's noticeable top end fizz. But yes, as life is basically one long filter sweep, that cutoff point might have been reached by 50. 🙂
Speaking of years, I wonder how many years it’s been since I may have had to realize that “arp” (as in arpeggiator) and “ARP” (as in Alan R. Pearlman)-while both being synths-related-are not the same. Learning about synths as a kid, in the early days of World Wide Web and prior to the new, affordable-analog renaissance, was … interesting.
i am also wondering to which JMJ's song "arpeggiator"/"arpégiateur" (from "concerts in china"/"concerts en chine") might refer.... but probably to both. :)
The part about using the external audio for processing sounds brings to mind an incident in which Weather Report co-founder Josef Zawinul had purchased his first 2600, told salesman Roger Powell how great he thought the sound was - and asked how you could get it to stop. He apparently had first cranked up the filter output which is intended for the external audio input and hadn’t made his way around yet to the attenuator section. One of the interesting quirks about the 2600 has to do with the 3620 keyboard model. At least two of the performance synthesizers that ARP marketed (the Odyssey and the Axxe) eventually became equipped with those PPC pads that succeeded the pitch bend knob. Were those pads ever built into the 3620 keyboard for the 2600? Despite going through every month largely strapped for cash, I imagine it would be worth donating to the Perlman foundation just so I might get in the running to partake of ARPs for All. I can imagine I’m not the only one to express such a sentiment in the comment section here.
Wow! The 2600 is the same age me. Wish i could afford one, but they are out of my price range. Also, do not know when KORG’s 2600 m will be available in the US. Cool video.
Bob Moog? Pffffftttt! That guy is a hack! Fantastic work as always Alex. Yeah I've just recently turned 51 and I'm nowhere near as cool as an ARP2600. I have the Behringer version. Ok it's not the same but it sounds pretty good to me and the workflow is the same, plus I could afford it, unlike the originals. Ooooh, I also have a B-Oddey as well, love it. I do need to figure out a way to confidence trick my brother in law out of his Oddey original....
@@AlexBallMusic Behringer. Still i'm having a blast and this video came out at a perfect time for me to try some fun patches. All your video's are a wealth of knowledge, Thank you so much for them!
As always, super fun and educational, I'll have to buy a behringer to have the same fun. May not be the exact same but it's close enough in my price range
Fantastic video as always! Frustrated that Korg did a limited release that now sell for $8000 + And ethically I refuse to support music tribe ( you do you ). Any news on the Korg 2600 M ?
Yeah, if only there had been a bigger run of those. I was pretty annoyed by the scalpers who grabbed them before they were even put on sale and then waited a couple of months before putting them on reverb / ebay for hugely inflated prices. The Korg 2600m is coming though and I imagine that will be more readily available.
Yeah, it doesn't. It slaps back to the lower CV or sometimes something in between! The limitations of the technology of the time. I was making use of it in the demo by letting the intervals jump.
As mentioned, any ad revenue from this video will be doubled and donated to the Alan R Pearlman Foundation. If you wish to chuck in a donation, this would be greatly appreciated: alanrpearlmanfoundation.org/donate/
Done and done. Great video, Alex. Informative and fun, with great compositions, as always. Cheers from SoCal.
@@cortical1 Many thanks!
Kids - this is how it's done. Kudos to you Alex Ball.
❤️🙏🏻❤️
Hello Alex: I am so old that I remember very clearly when Rick Wakeman released his vinyl album "The Six Wives of Henry the Eighth". Not only did the radio announcer play the entire album, he also read off the entire list of equipment that Rick played. (Yes, it was that kind of radio program.) To a young fellow growing up in the wilds of the Australian suburbs, the sounds that 2600 and it's ilk produced were pure magic. They still are pure magic. Keep up the wonderful work.
I can imagine the feeling of hearing this mystery instrument creating these new sounds. Nice that it still lives with you!
@@AlexBallMusic Hello Alex: I have many wonderful memories from that time. Stay well and safe.
Well shit bro. I remember that too. I even still have the original album. Old synths never die, they just need their caps done. Thanks alex.
@@SpikesStudio3 Hello Michael: Yes, I also have the original album. I also went to see Rick Wakeman when he came to Australia on the Journey to Center of the Earth tour in about 1974. There were three great British keyboard players in that era, Keith Emerson, Rick Wakeman and Steve Winwood. I've been able to see the last two of those play. Stay well and safe.
Man, you are sooo lucky. Its the influence of wakeman and richards that got me into synths. And my mum too. How cool is that? Cheers.
I love that you actually play music on the synths that you discuss, rather than just demo individual sounds. It really shows what these awesome instruments are capable of!
That‘s what this awesome Alex is capable of.
Thank you both!
My 5 year old son was very impressed with the R2-D2 sounds, his smile was nearly as big as yours!
Target audience. :)
Be careful about 5 year olds when these videos are played. There are a few collaborations that take a toll on children's sanity.
This is how get my news, Alex is the best synthesizerer edumacationalist this side of alpha Centauri
Synthemesizer edumacation is my passion.
@@AlexBallMusic and symphensanzer enjoyeling is a great pastime of mine, lucky me.
I must confess to that little bit of extra excitement whenever I see a new Alex Ball video. Thanks, mate!
Whenever you see a new Alex Ball video, you have to 'Check It Out'. Alex Ball's videos make you 'Hurt So Good'.
As always Alex, Beautiful and brilliant video!
The ARP 2600 has been the mainstay centerpiece in my studio and music for going on 35 years. I feel fortunate that it’s how I started my winding journey through the wilderness of synthesis. Much love to you maestro! ❤️
Hey Lisa! Loved your performance in the Symposium with the Mellotrons, Moogs and the 2600. Hugely dynamic and expressive as ever!
35 years - wow! Doesn't that say a lot about how enduring an instrument it is! Things come and go, but not the 2600.
Great video Alex! Thank you so much! I grew up as a teenager playing with ARP synths in a local music store in North Attleboro MA. At the time I had no idea that the ARP headquarters were so very close by. I still vividly remember lusting after this ARP Odyssey and Axxe synths! :)
Ah cool! The old days of music stores. That has kind of largely died out now. Shame.
I could listen to Alex playing the 2600 all day! …and rather often that’s actually what I end up doing 🤩
Thank you. I could probably play a 2600 for a day actually. Such a fun synth.
Love or hate Behringer, their 2600 clone has put this synth in the hands of the hobby synthesist. The 2600 is as good today as it ever was but even more accessable. Thank you Alan R Pearlman and all those at ARP who created this amazing instrument.
It's great there's 2600s being available again. Korg, Antonus, Behringer, Arturia, Cherry Audio. Many ways to go.
Yup!
"Kinda Pete" is Completely AWESOME!
Alex, you've done it again. Brilliant as always.
Cheers Peter. Had to do the Pete thing (or kinda Pete thing).
@@AlexBallMusic Sounds just like "The Relay"!
Tune into Alex. First 5 seconds and my neck has snapped in half. As always, thanks!
McNeckyFilth.
I enjoyed my original ARP Odyssey white face from the summer of 1973 to around 1995 when it was pretty much dead and I sold it to a repair genius in California. I used it in weekend bands and in my tiny home studio. Now I have twin Behringer Odysseys above a Nord C1 and a Behringer 2600 racked vertically on some coffee cans behind one of the Odysseys. (The Odyssey is actually wider than the 2600.) The rig lights up like the bridge of the Enterprise.
Nice you can recapture the old magic and expand upon it!
Great video as always Alex. I remember seeing these on sale when they were first introduced. It seems you have as many synth t-shirts as synths! This was a great demo of a versatile machine and as always very rewarding to watch given the amount of work you put in. Thanks!
1971! I was minus years old. 😂
T-shirts - basically all I wear. It's like the masonic hand shake, but for synthesists.
@@AlexBallMusic Enjoy it while you can! I used to collect Kraftwerk T-Shirts. As you get older, its polo shirts I am afraid unless you have an excessively athletic build! BTW you should do a studio tour - I'd be interested to know what your arsenal includes!
wow what cool memories. this was legend and still is.
back then, I built an "Elektor Formant" (you know that one?) together with a comrade, --
6 oscillators, two independent output channels, 1 ladder fiilter (not in the DIY package of course), one state variable filter, 3 LFOs, 3 ADSRs etc.
a number of severe modifications: keyboard needs only ONE contact for gate and CV (what a quagmire this was with 2 contacts) !! default hard-wiring of everything plus jacks, +/- 1,2,3,4 octave switches, delayed vibrato, pitch bender, some more keyboard features. played ~40 gigs with it!
so I'm super glad every time, when someone comes up with a competent vintage synth video.
The music department at the college I was attending bought a grey 2600 in 1971. It was great to get hands on such an iconic synth so early.
I have a couple of vst emulations... Arturia's 2600 is the best I have.
Great demo, thanks! Subscribing.
You just keep on knocking them out of the park Alex! Great as always
Thank you Peter.
Kinda Pete track really reminds me of Beauty Stab by ABC. Brilliant as always, Alex!
brilliant work and stunning musicianship
Great music as always Alex and the ARP foundation is a brilliant educational platform!
Deserves extra thumbs up for the R2-D2 :)
🤖
Love this video (and all your others), and my god the ARP 2600 is a beautiful beast.
Cheers! Yeah, the 2600 is timeless.
your videos always are extremely enjoyable, thanks for documenting those amazing pieces of electronic wonders :D also almos hitting 100k!!
Thanks Daniel! Yes, may well reach the 100k milestone, would be nice.
Donated & plugged this video. Now I know why my KARP Odyssey Module has been calling to me all week! Nice work on those classic patches 👌 Good work all around, Alex. Cheers!
Awesome - nice one. Have fun with old KARP!
Never stop making videos. I want to grow old watching Alex Ball videos.
Thank you! I will whilst I can and people tune in.
The Arp 2600 has always been my favourite synth. I always liked that you had to get involved in using it and learning about it to unlock its possibilities. The best instruments do that.
There are so many examples of the ARP 2600 in legendary albums, movies, etc. Among my personal favorites prominently featuring this synth are the albums Snivilisation (1994) and In Sides (1996) by Orbital. Paul Hartnoll LOVES the ARP 2600.
Definitely, it's all over the place!
I've seen Paul's 2600 in the flesh a few times. Looks super cool with the Orbital logo on it.
@@AlexBallMusic John Carpenther Assault on Precint 13 is 2600. the movie that put me into synths in early 90's
Depeche Mode used the ARP 2600 on their early albums!
@@yusufkhan-ig7dv They got 4 of it
Watching this makes me hope for more lockdowns, so you're locked in with some synths some more. Keep up the great work 👏
Priceless video, Maestro Alex, thank you so much! Your keyboard chops looking hotter than ever! 🤓🎹🤘
Thanks very much!
Extremely entertaining and enriching, even educational, as every Alex Ball video is. 💙👍
Thank you sir, much appreciated.
Such a classic!! Thanks for sharing!
Great video and music as usual Alex! This dovetails nicely with your ARP documentary, awesome stuff...
Cheers Jeremy. Yep, nice to go back to it!
After stumbling on a couple of sounds on my Behringer 2600, I'm convinced that many sounds on the Six million Dollar Man, including the famous bionic eye effect, was done on the 2600, and the scene where Col Steve Austin fights the John Saxon robot, the sample and hold is used to convey a computer brain in the robot.
Very informative video Alex.
Quite possibly - weapon of choice for sound designers.
Thank you so much, that was an awesome video ! Always love when you play and explain synth stuff :D
Did you talk about the ARP Quadra already?
A friend of mine had one. Worked very well on the stage, it had a computer algorithm to tune/recalibrate all its analog modules, though it took a couple of minutes.
When the base keys kicked in during the first tune you played, it really reminded me of music from Final Fantasy 7... And I loved it!! Awsome video Alex. Thank you!
Great video of this classic ARP Synth,
Lovely demos Alex especially the processed guitar.
Alex, first comment but had to express that your infectious passion for the music and these old machines continues to inspire me with every new video, thanks, appreciate it dude.❤️
Thanks, I'm glad they inspire you too!
Awesome video, Alex, and your audio production is top notch to boot!
Thanks Kira!
Such a beauty! Glad to hear that the ARP Foundation is doing well. I think your ARP doco was the first video I watched from you.
Yep, they obviously had a mountain to climb whilst forming during a pandemic but it's moving along in spite of that.
Awesome video Alex!
Great video long waited for.
🙂
that outro jam Alex!!!! more of that please.. i would love to hear more of the experimental stuff u make.. i do love the 80s stuff you seem to usually do but show us ur wild side more please hehe x
Cheers. Maybe I've got an albums worth of stuff like that...😉
just love the demo1 poly-phoney, great vibe
I imagine that when you turn 50, you'll still be partying like it's 2600.
Awesome, yeah I love using the duo-phonic keyboard for 2 note paraphony. Mine is a Korg reissue and it one of my favs in my studio! Thanks Alex for the update on the foundation as well, glad to hear they're doing big things!
Hey Marshal. Glad you got the reissue, that's great. I would have loved one but, hey ho.
Foundation - yeah, great to see it coming together despite the covid hold ups. Would love to get over to Boston to see them one day
Love your videos Alex - thanks!
Thank you!
Grooooovy baby! I mean...well done, old bean!
What, what!
Wonderful as ever, Alex! Fab vid...I now have serious lust for a 2600!
It's an awesome combination of ideas in a box!
Funny story, i checked your channel just last night hoping for a new vid, and here it is!! . Happy birthday ARP 2600! 🎂
I'm back baby. Got a good run of very cool stuff coming for the next few weeks. :)
@@AlexBallMusic Outstanding!!! Love your work mate! Keep geekin'
Great video. I'll tell you why. Not only informative but instructional. I have a Behringer 2600 and it has become probably my favourite mono(duo) synth. I am definitely going to try some of your patches.
SUCH lovely noise! Thank you!
Cheers!
You ROCK Alex! Great video!
Thank you. Nice channel name btw. 😂
@@AlexBallMusic ah yes! The purported storage size of the average human brain, in hard drive terms! 🤪😬
"There are 100s of sounds you can make with the 2600. Obviously that be a very long video" One which we'd gladly watch.
Cool space jams !
Hey Alex - great stuff! Really like your videos exploring the history of synth companies, too. I lusted after a 2600 back in the day. Now relatively happy with the Behringer 2600 which has scratched an itch 😀
Cheers Ian. Glad you're having fun with yours!
so great, thank you for celebrating the ARP 2600 anniversary
Thanks for tuning in.
So good again!
The soft-synths are fine for patch libraries but you just cannot compare with the immediacy of having hands on experience. Also being able to patch in and out to other gear :-)
Yeah, a very different experience sitting in front of something physical and touching it.
@@AlexBallMusic that’s what she said!!
True but depends on how you approach the production task. I'd rather crack on and not have a dial-in each sound.
No right or wrong way though, just what you prefer i guess
Absolutely adore your channel sir. Cheers 🍻
Thank you!
Just stunning!! 2500 next?
If I can ever find one again! I did get to record with one back in 2019.
Always the top TH-camr for me :) top video
Thank you!
Amazing stuff Alex. You rock.
Cheers!
Listening to Alex jamming, I could swear I knew some bits and pieces from somewhere. And then, bingo! Depeche Mode "Speak & Spell" and Soft Cell's "Non Stop Erotic Cabaret". Daniel Miller used his own 2600 on both of these albums and he still owns that very ARP according to a very recent interview. Best wishes from Poland, Mr Ball! 😎
Awesome. Where can I get the CD of those demos? Great songwriting perfectly matched to that amazing synth.
Some nasty beats right from the jump. Great job as always Alex.
Cheers. Yes, the 2600 can do nasty. :)
Another excellent video, Alex. The Korg clone is amazingly beautiful, but an original holds its own allure.
Something magical about hand-built originals from the 70s factories, but that Korg does look gorgeous.
@@AlexBallMusic There is a very good synth shop here in San Francisco, called Robotspeak. Every time I stop in, I ask him to power up his Korg 2600 clone, but he won't touch it. He just wants to sell it for the god-knows-what price! I can't keep my hands off of it! However, I am exploring with my own Behringer BARP 2600.
Nice funky intro!
love alex should have been a bbc presenter back in the day quality stuff kudos !!!
Put me in the radiophonic workshop.
In this year (1971) many beautiful things were created in the world !!
Man it sounds so full & amazing
Yep and this is the "worst" 2600 model apparently.
I love the sign Ben Burtt has on his 2600, making it absolutely clear not to change the settings on them.
Does he? I haven't seen that but it would kind of make sense given how specific the settings are.
That tune at the end really bites!
Wow what a huge sound
Awesome 👌
I absolutely love my 2600. It’s the Korg FS reissue and it sounds massive.
I couldn't get an FS. I have the M on order, if we ever get through the chip shortage. Korg reissue is the only one to get IMHO.
You got one! Nice.
Great overview of this… think you could get your hands on the new Korg ARP 2600 mini version and do a sound comparison? As always a fun vid with great jams…
Damn, now I need an ARP. 😅 Thanks for the video Alex! 👍
Everyone needs a 303....and a 2600. 😉
I have the Behringer, which has both filters, and I can’t tell the difference between the 2 filters. Maybe because I’m as old as the original 2600 and top end is not high on my list of things I still hear. It’s a lovely design and gives me all the 'modular' goodness I need.
I have an original Odyssey mkII with the earlier filter and the Avatar with the later and it sounds like someone opens the filter when you switch from the latter to the former. It's noticeable top end fizz.
But yes, as life is basically one long filter sweep, that cutoff point might have been reached by 50. 🙂
What a beast! Since there is little chance to get an original 2600: what do you think about the Behringer?
Not played the Behringer but Rob Keeble worked on it and he knows his stuff. No doubt it's excellent.
Rayy, check out videos by Ralph Baumgartl. He has one original and several Behringers.
Not cheesy. 🍕😁
👍
Has to be Italian for that. ;)
excellent ox
AWWW YEAH
Speaking of years, I wonder how many years it’s been since I may have had to realize that “arp” (as in arpeggiator) and “ARP” (as in Alan R. Pearlman)-while both being synths-related-are not the same. Learning about synths as a kid, in the early days of World Wide Web and prior to the new, affordable-analog renaissance, was … interesting.
Conversely, now living in a world with online videos and channels like this-that’s a dream come true! Thanks, Alex!
Yeah, nice coincidence that.
@@AlexBallMusic Hmm, also: nice chap, you. 😊
i am also wondering to which JMJ's song "arpeggiator"/"arpégiateur" (from "concerts in china"/"concerts en chine") might refer.... but probably to both. :)
@3:39 Banger I was literally bobbing my head and turned and my toddler is doing a breakdance on the ground lol .
Ok, that bass at the beginning. . . how can I get something that deep and huge sounding without it turning the whole low end to mud?
Lovely!!!!
okay after seeing you do guitar processing through this now I desperately want to try this but make lightning bolt/melt banana noise rock
Well done!
Cheers!
The part about using the external audio for processing sounds brings to mind an incident in which Weather Report co-founder Josef Zawinul had purchased his first 2600, told salesman Roger Powell how great he thought the sound was - and asked how you could get it to stop. He apparently had first cranked up the filter output which is intended for the external audio input and hadn’t made his way around yet to the attenuator section.
One of the interesting quirks about the 2600 has to do with the 3620 keyboard model. At least two of the performance synthesizers that ARP marketed (the Odyssey and the Axxe) eventually became equipped with those PPC pads that succeeded the pitch bend knob. Were those pads ever built into the 3620 keyboard for the 2600?
Despite going through every month largely strapped for cash, I imagine it would be worth donating to the Perlman foundation just so I might get in the running to partake of ARPs for All. I can imagine I’m not the only one to express such a sentiment in the comment section here.
Wow! The 2600 is the same age me. Wish i could afford one, but they are out of my price range. Also, do not know when KORG’s 2600 m will be available in the US. Cool video.
Would be interested to try the 2600m when it emerges.
Bob Moog? Pffffftttt! That guy is a hack!
Fantastic work as always Alex. Yeah I've just recently turned 51 and I'm nowhere near as cool as an ARP2600.
I have the Behringer version. Ok it's not the same but it sounds pretty good to me and the workflow is the same, plus I could afford it, unlike the originals. Ooooh, I also have a B-Oddey as well, love it.
I do need to figure out a way to confidence trick my brother in law out of his Oddey original....
Apparently Bob made some synths but I've never heard of him. 😉
got my Gray Meanie yesterday
An original or the Behringer?
@@AlexBallMusic Behringer. Still i'm having a blast and this video came out at a perfect time for me to try some fun patches. All your video's are a wealth of knowledge, Thank you so much for them!
Great bass playing dude, you spend much time playing bass? You look very at home on it. Awesome stuff.
I'm a guitarist and not really a keyboard player but don't tell anyone. 😉
As always, super fun and educational, I'll have to buy a behringer to have the same fun. May not be the exact same but it's close enough in my price range
Cheers Zack. Yes, I don't think I'll ever be able to get an original either but there's several alternatives these days which is cool.
Fantastic video as always!
Frustrated that Korg did a limited release that now sell for $8000 + And ethically I refuse to support music tribe ( you do you ). Any news on the Korg 2600 M ?
Yeah, if only there had been a bigger run of those. I was pretty annoyed by the scalpers who grabbed them before they were even put on sale and then waited a couple of months before putting them on reverb / ebay for hugely inflated prices.
The Korg 2600m is coming though and I imagine that will be more readily available.
Très intéressant
how does this diagram at 3:15 maintain CV when you release the key?
to me it seems, that something is missing here... :)
Yeah, it doesn't. It slaps back to the lower CV or sometimes something in between! The limitations of the technology of the time.
I was making use of it in the demo by letting the intervals jump.
Pete piece was brilliant. Chiptune emulated on an analog synth even more brilliant!
Alex wouldn't it be rude if I ask you to share these chiptune samples?
Cheers. The samples?
@@AlexBallMusic I thought maybe some bits and pieces left after that chiptune recording.) I'd love to here them out of context.